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²ÝÝ®ÎÛÊÓƵµ¼º½ Calendar 2013-2014 COURSES OF INSTRUCTION Course Descriptions A Anthropology ANTH
Anthropology ANTH

Instruction offered by members of the Department of Anthropology in the Faculty of Arts.

Department Head – M. Pavelka

Junior Courses
Anthropology 201       Introduction to Primatology and Human Evolution
Introduction to evolutionary theory and processes, with particular reference to the primates. Topics include primate taxonomy, distribution, reproduction, locomotion, diet, social organization, and evolution, with special emphasis on the path of human evolution.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 203       Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology
The nature of human society: its elements, its variability and its perpetuation. Conclusions will be drawn from comparisons of institutions (political, economic, religious, educational and sexual) in both small-scale and large-scale societies.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 213       Contemporary Aboriginal Issues in Canada
An exploration of the history of Aboriginal/state relations, the development of Indian policy, and current efforts of Aboriginal peoples to address historical matters through the critique of the residential school system and the pursuit of self-government, land claims, modern treaties and Aboriginal rights. Includes a critical examination of Canadian historical writing, popular culture, and stereotypes of Indians and will survey contemporary Aboriginal expressions of identity in the arts, literature, cultural performances, and other public contexts.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Senior Courses
Anthropology 303       Business in Cultural Context
Ways in which differences in cultural values and practices affect the form and nature of interaction between business parties, especially those of differing national/cultural/ethnic backgrounds.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 311       Primate Behaviour
Primate behaviour and related topics: social dynamics, sociobiology, socio-ecology, dominance, aggression, kinship, sexual behaviour, socialization, learning, cognition, communication, ape language, and conservation.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 317       Ethnographic Survey of Africa South of the Sahara
Traditional societies in sub-Saharan Africa, concentrating on a number of classical social anthropological field work studies.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 319       Ethnographic Survey of North Africa
Ethnographic survey of the peoples of North Africa, including the Sahara, and historical analysis of their incorporation within the contemporary national states of the region.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 321       Ethnographic Survey of Latin America
A survey of cultural traditions of Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central and South America as they have evolved since the sixteenth century.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 323       Culture and Society of China
Diversity of social and cultural patterns in imperial and contemporary times.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 329       Ethnographic Survey of Selected World Areas
Arranged for various topics in the anthropology of world areas. Consult department for topics in any given year.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for Anthropology 329 and 399 will not be allowed.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 331       Sex and Gender

Cross-species and cross-cultural perspective on sex and gender.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 333       Working in Anthropology
Introduction to the practical use of anthropological knowledge and research methods. Includes discussion of the specific challenges of practicing anthropology outside of academia.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for Anthropology 333 and 357 will not be allowed.
Also known as:
(formerly Anthropology 433)
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Anthropology 341       Medical Anthropology
A survey of anthropological approaches to disease, illness and the maintenance of health.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 343       Militarism and Militarization
Comparative global ethnographic survey of militarization processes. Examples will be drawn from contemporary and historical societies, with a particular emphasis on the wide variety of institutions and communities necessary to the production of violence, and on their relationship to the larger society.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Notes:
Not open to students with credit in Anthropology 315.
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Anthropology 349       Anthropology of HIV/AIDS

Examines the individual, clinical, epidemiological, cultural, social, psychological, political, economic, and public policy dimensions of HIV/AIDS along with its meaning and importance on a global level from an anthropological perspective.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for both Anthropology 349 and 399.01 will not allowed.
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Anthropology 355       An Ethnographic Survey of Native North America
Selected North American Indian cultures in terms of the relationships among basic subsistence adaptations, social, ceremonial, and ideological structures.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 357       Anthropology of Development
Cultural dimensions of local and international development policy, programming, and evaluation.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
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Anthropology 361       History of Anthropology
Historical survey of anthropological thought from the enlightenment to the present.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Also known as:
(formerly Anthropology 461)
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Anthropology 363       Magic, Witchcraft, and Gods: Anthropology of Religion
Contemporary anthropological theoretical perspectives on indigenous and world religions.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 371       Political Anthropology
Comparative analysis of power, authority, dependency relations, and processes of governance, from the perspective of social anthropology, with primary emphasis on stateless societies and formative states.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Also known as:
(formerly Anthropology 471)
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Anthropology 375       Anthropology of Law
Systems of law and social control in both state and non-state societies.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203 or consent of the Department.
Also known as:
(formerly Anthropology 475)
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Anthropology 379       Urban Anthropology
A study of tribalism, ethnicity, sub-cultures, social networks and related phenomena in urban societies. Attention will be paid to planning and applied urban anthropology.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 385       Economic Anthropology
Comparative analysis of production, distribution and consumption in small-scale and complex societies; theories of exchange; effects of capitalism upon traditional economies and social organization.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Also known as:
(formerly Anthropology 485)
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Anthropology 391       Anthropological Theory
Study of a variety of theories in Social and Cultural Anthropology, and their implications for research design and field work.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for both Anthropology 391 and 365 will not be allowed.
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Anthropology 393       Ethnography of Global-Local Dynamics
Changes in the international division of labour and resulting social, cultural, and political effects, with particular attention to the incorporation of small-scale societies.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for both Anthropology 393 and 387 will not be allowed.
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Anthropology 399       Special Topics in Anthropology

Examination of select problems in Anthropology. Topics may be drawn from all subfields in the discipline.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 402       Independent Study
Selected topics in anthropology to be offered to Majors and Honours in their fourth year. Topics for each student to be arranged on the basis of special interest and need.
Course Hours:
F(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 404       Independent Study
Selected topics in anthropology to be offered to Majors and Honours in their fourth year. Topics for each student to be arranged on the basis of special interest and need.
Course Hours:
F(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 405       Ecology of Tropical Forest Societies
Adaptation of indigenous societies to their tropical forest habitat, and their transformation under the impact of industrial society.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203.
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Anthropology 411       Methods and Analysis for Anthropology
An introduction to research design, data collection, and analysis as used in anthropology. Cross-cultural research design and methods, use of participant observation and personal documents will be emphasized.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 391.
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Anthropology 413       Method in Primatology

Focus on observational methods and analysis, with practical application in laboratory study at the Calgary Zoo.


Course Hours:
H(3-3)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 311.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for both Anthropology 413 and 351 will not be allowed.
Notes:
Field trips required.       
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Anthropology 419       Tipi, Buffalo, and Vision: People of the Plains
From the Blackfoot in the North to the Apache in the south, the lifeways of Plains people were incredibly diverse, including the iconic buffalo hunting people of the western Plains as well as the horticultural people of the eastern Plains. Explores traditional Plains culture as recorded in anthropological ethnographies, early European written accounts, and First Nations oral traditions
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Also known as:
(Archaeology 419)
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Anthropology 421       Contemporary Latin American Society
An examination of selected issues in the anthropological study of contemporary Latin America.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 321.
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Anthropology 425       Primate Cognition
Causes and consequences of primate sociality, such as brain structure and evolution, kin recognition, Theory of Mind, social perception and awareness, and similarities and differences in communication and cognition between human and nonhuman primates.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 311.
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for both Anthropology 425 and 505.03 will not be allowed.     
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Anthropology 427       Women in East Asian Societies
Comparison of women's roles in China, Japan, and Korea, with particular reference to family structure and economic organization.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 323.
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Anthropology 435       Evolutionary Anthropology
Analysis of evolutionary principles and processes (such as natural selection, sexual selection, kin selection, parental investment) as they are applied to the current study of human and nonhuman primate behaviour. Special emphasis on socioecological approaches to primate behaviour.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 311.
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Anthropology 441       Problems in the Anthropology of Health

An examination of select problems in the anthropology of health. Topics of course assignments include models of health in Canada, etiological claims in health research, and anthropology of pharmaceuticals.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 341.
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Anthropology 451       Topics in Primate Behavioural Ecology and Conservation
Advanced topics in the behavioural ecology and conservation biology of nonhuman primates, including related theory and field techniques.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 311.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 467       Soldiering: Perspectives on Military Life
An anthropological approach to soldiering in the aftermath of the Second World War. Questions the idea of a universal soldier, soldiers’ shifting relationship to the nation-state, the rise of privatized warfare and the creation of global military communities. Special attention will be paid to the rise of humanitarian military regimes, military occupation, new technologies of warfare and non-human soldiers.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 343.
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Anthropology 479       Housing and Society

Examines interactions between housing and social organization in cross-cultural context. Emphasizes the varied types of built form, their cultural meanings, implications for social life within households and for society more broadly, and their political and economic consequences. Pays particular attention to contemporary housing problems such as homelessness and urban sprawl.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 379 or Geography 351.
Also known as:
(Geography 479)
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Anthropology 501       Conference Course in Anthropology
Arranged for various topics of anthropology on the basis of special interest and need.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 203, one additional senior Anthropology  course and consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 505       Conference Course in Primatology
Arranged for various topics of primatology on the basis of special interests and need.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 311 and one additional senior primatology course and consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 523       Human Ecology
Current directions in various subfields of human ecology as they apply to Anthropology, Archaeology, and Geography.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
Antirequisite(s):
Not open to students with credit in Anthropology 609, Archaeology 609, and Geography 609.
Also known as:
(Archaeology 523) (Geography 523)
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Anthropology 535       History and Theory in Primatology and Physical Anthropology
Historical and theoretical survey of ideas about the biological bases of human and non-human primate social behaviour. Impacts of the theoretical models of the modern synthesis, ethology, behavioural ecology, socio-ecology, and sociobiology or the study of human and non-human primates.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 413.
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Anthropology 541       Field Study in Social and Cultural Anthropology
Research projects carried out off campus, under the supervision of a member of academic staff, and resulting in a graded project report.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 552       Field Studies in Primatology
Intensive training and practice in field methods of observational primate behaviour or behavioural ecology.
Course Hours:
F(3-3)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 413 and consent of the Department.
Corequisite(s):
Anthropology 553.
Notes:
Normally offered during Spring Term.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 553       Primate Behavioural Research Design
Design of a research project, including the identification and operationalization of a research question and the collection and analysis of data.
Course Hours:
H(3-3)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 413 and consent of the Department.
Corequisite(s):
Anthropology 552.
Notes:
Normally offered during Spring Term.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 571       Advanced Seminar in Primatology

Current theoretical and methodological issues will be explored in a discussion based seminar format.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 413.
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Anthropology 573       Advanced Seminar in Social and Cultural Anthropology

Current theoretical and methodological issues will be explored in a discussion based seminar format, with the possibility of development of a research project.


Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 411.
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Anthropology 589       Nutritional Anthropology
The study of human dietary practices from biological and cultural perspectives. Subjects covered include the development of nutritional anthropology, principles of nutrition, principles of ecology, diet from an evolutionary, comparative and historic perspective, the impact of undernutrition on human physiology, and behaviour and methods in nutritional anthropology.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Anthropology 201 or Archaeology 203 or Archaeology 305, and consent of the Department.
Also known as:
(Archaeology 589)
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Graduate Courses

Only where appropriate to a student's program may graduate credit be received for courses numbered 500-599.

Anthropology 601       Conference Course in Anthropology
A specialized area of Anthropology selected on the basis of particular interest and need.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 603       Thesis Development
A reading and conference course in the student's substantive area conducted jointly by at least two faculty members.
Course Hours:
H(3S-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 605       Professional Skills for Anthropologists
Training and practice in research/teaching skills: grantsmanship, conference and classroom presentations, academic publishing, job interviews.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
Antirequisite(s):
Not open to students with credit in Anthropology 601.90 or the equivalent.
NOT INCLUDED IN GPA
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Anthropology 611       Methods in Anthropological Research
A variety of topics relevant to research and the logic of inquiry in Anthropology.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 613       Current Issues in Methodology in Primatology
A variety of topics relating to aspects of data collection and data analysis in primatology, with a focus on ecological and behavioural data.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 631       Anthropological Theory

Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 635       Primatological Theory
Seminar dealing with the theoretical material of primatological and biobehavioural perspectives in Anthropology.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 641       Seminar in Civil-Military Relations
Comparative analysis of relations between civil society and military institutions. A critical approach to analysing how civil and military institutions mutually constitute each other, rather than taking the military and civilian sectors as a given. Special attention will be paid to twentieth century militarization as a social process that has dramatically changed the shape of both civilian and military spheres.
Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
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Anthropology 659       Primatology
Specialized topics and laboratory training in this field will vary from year to year and may include: behavioural ecology, biomechanics, evolution, biosociality, and field methodology.
Course Hours:
H(3-3)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Anthropology 701       Independent Studies

Course Hours:
H(3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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