George Mason University > University Catalog > Course Descriptions
2003-04 University Catalog George Mason University

Anthropology (ANTH)

Sociology and Anthropology

114 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3:3:0). For non-Western credit. Overview of major ideas and approaches in the study of cultures around the world. Survey of kinship, social organization, political economy, religious beliefs, and other aspects of non-Western cultures.

120 Introduction to Archaeology (3:3:0). Introduction to survey of anthropological archaeology. Development and use of contemporary theory and field and lab methods.

135 Human Evolution, Biology, and Culture (3:3:0). Exploration of human origins and nature, primate social groups and behavior, fossil evidence for human evolution, and the evolution of culture and human society.

299 Independent Study (1-3:0:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114 or permission of instructor. Individual study in anthropology on topic organized in advance by student and instructor.

300 Civilizations (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Cross-cultural and transtemporal examination of complex societies and civilizations. Exploration of developmental schema for rise, articulation, spread, and decline of historic and contemporary civilizations.

301 Native North Americans (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Exploration of native North American cultures and selected aspects of Indian-white historical relations. Emphasis on cultural persistence as well as change.

302 Peoples and Cultures of Latin America (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Examination of Latin American cultures and selected aspects of historical record.

303 Peoples and Cultures of Selected Regions (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of cultures of a specific region (e.g., Middle East, Amazonia).

304 Peoples and Cultures of the Pacific (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Survey of 20th-century Melanesian, Polynesian, and Micronesian cultures. Case studies of interplay between cultural systems and island ecology.

305 Hunter-Gatherer Societies (3:3:0). Prerequisite: 60 credits, 6 credits of anthropology including ANTH 120, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Examination of early human societies with emphasis on environmental, technological, and cultural aspects of hunting and gathering as a successful prehistoric and contemporary means of adaptation.

306 Peoples and Cultures of Island Asia (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Examination of cultures of the Island Asia culture region; focus on native cultures of Indonesia, Borneo, and the Philippines.

309 Peoples and Cultures of India (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114 and 60 credits or permission of instructor. Examination of South Asia, with emphasis on India. Focus includes (1) a general overview of prehistory and history; (2) the impact of colonialism; (3) contemporary Indian culture, including the changing relations of caste and class, family organization, and the roles of women, religion, and ideology; and (4) current trends in economic development and socioeconomic differences in different parts of the country.

310 Social Organization and Kinship (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of social organization, kinship, descent, and kinship terminologies in mainly non-Western cultures, emphasizing both the meaning of specific cultural systems and cross-cultural similarities and differences.

311 Peoples and Cultures of Mainland Southeast Asia (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Survey of societies of mainland Southeast Asia, with emphasis on successive waves of outside cultural influences and relations between contrasting ethnic groups in modern states. Focus on Thailand and Malaysia.

312 Comparative Political Systems (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of cultural and ecological contexts of political structures and competition for power in selected societies; a cross-cultural and comparative approach to study of political conflict, leadership, values, and symbolism.

313 Anthropological Perspectives on Religion (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit. Examination of religion as a cultural system. Topics include mythology, ritual, symbolism, and dogma. Cross-cultural and predominantly non-Western material is emphasized.

315 Socialization Processes (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of selected aspects of the cultural transmission process in specific local cultures, selected from various world culture regions, with emphasis on transmission of cultures.

320 Laboratory Techniques in Archaeology (4:3:2). Prerequisite: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Study of research techniques by directed group projects in analysis of materials such as ceramics, glass, and lithics through discussions, demonstrations, and participation.

322 Historical Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of materials, theories, and methods of archaeology derived from and applied to historical sites, as they complement archival records.

324 Warfare, Violence, and Sacrifice in Antiquity (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of the instructor. Examination of the origin and nature of conflict in human society with an emphasis on the ancient past. Major topics reviewed include the possible role of violence in human evolution, cross-cultural studies of conflict in indigenous society, warfare in early states, and sacrifice as a ritual practice.

325 Field Techniques in Archaeology (3-6:0:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Intensive study of archaeological field techniques by directed group projects in site survey, site testing, recording techniques, and stratigraphy through discussions, demonstrations, and hands-on experience. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits.

330 Peoples and Cultures of Selected Regions: Nonwestern (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114, 60 credits or permission of instructor. Examination of cultures of a specific region (e.g. Africa, the Middle East). Region must focus primarily on non-western native cultures.

331 Refugees (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Introduction to the causes and consequences of forced dislocation as a global issue. Course covers formally recognized refugees, as well as those people (such as internally displaced persons and asylum seekers) who are in refugee-like circumstances. Attention is directed to understanding the personal experiences of refugees and examining the efforts on their behalf at the national and international levels.

332 Cultures in Comparative Perspective (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114 or permission of instructor. For non-Western credit and credit toward the B.A. in Sociology. Examination of the varieties of cultural experience. Several cultures are studied in depth, with attention to local histories, global contexts, and shifting perspectives on the practice of ethnography.

333 Humanitarian Action (3:3:0). Prerequisite:ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of humanitarian action, drawing on anthropology's holistic and comparative perspective developed to ground understanding of humanitarian action within larger cultural contexts. Attention is directed toward cultural, biological, environmental, and political sources of humanitarian crises and the actual and potential responses to them. Focuses on large-scale response to social emergencies as culturally informed behavior.

360 Biological Aspects of Human Sociality (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 135, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Inquiry into the biological dimensions of humans as culture-bearing animals. Topics include altruism, aggression, primate social organization, morphology, comparative ethology, and microevolutionary genetic differentiation.

365 Race and Racism (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 135, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of biological dimensions of human variation and the beginnings of race as a concept. Evolution of human biodiversity in culturally distinct human groups related to environment, physiology, genetics, nutrition, and disease is discussed. Use of scientific analyses of human biodiversity is explored.

370 Ecology and Culture (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of relationships among environment, culture, and human behavior with an emphasis on cultural ecological explanations in mainly non-Western contexts.

371 Psychological Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Survey of issues in study of relationships between cultural and psychological variables. Major topics viewed cross-culturally include personality, mental illness, projective systems, cognition, and learning.

375 Anthropological Perspectives on History (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Use of ethnographic, archaeological, linguistic, and documentary data, in light of anthropological theory, to interpret the past and processes of change among indigenous peoples throughout the world.

380 Anthropological Linguistics (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Anthropological analyses of language behavior, origins, and change, emphasizing interplay between language and culture and anthropology and linguistics.

381 Comparative Medical Systems (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Survey of the discipline of medical anthropology with focus on traditional medical beliefs and the diverse responses to modern scientific medicine both in developing countries and among cultural minorities in the United States.

385 Gender, Class, and Ethnicity in Latin America (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examines the bases for gender differences and similarities across a variety of societies and cultures in Latin America. Interrelationships among constructions of gender, class, and ethnicity are examined.

390 Theories, Methods, and Issues I (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114 and 60 credits, or permission of instructor. First part of a two-course sequence that reviews the major theoretical traditions and schools of thought in anthropology. Required for anthropology majors.

395 Work, Technology, and Society: An IT Perspective (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114, 60 credits or permission of instructor. Introduction to the anthropology of work, technology, and society, with emphasis on information technology. Covers the general conceptual issues of information technology and also involves specific practical exercises with computers, their operating systems, the logic of automated production, databases, and web-based communication. Attention also directed to social and ethical issues raised by contemporary information technology.

396 Issues in Anthropology: Social Sciences (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114, 60 credits or permission of instructor. Topic of contemporary interest in anthropology, focusing on social science topics of interest.

399 Issues in Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114 and 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Topic of contemporary interest in anthropology, changing from semester to semester, and focusing on topics such as sex roles, anthropology and ethics, and primate social organization. May be repeated for credit.

400 Engaging the World: Anthropoligical Perspectives on Social Issues (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 114, 60 hours, completion of all general education requirements, or permission of instructor. Examines selected topics with emphasis on the integration of different kinds of knowledge and the balancing of alternative ways of assessing meaning and relevance. Topics are generally (but not exclusively) drawn from the issues of global economic processes, civic rights and responsibilities, the environment, and migration. Student papers and oral presentations receive formal review by multiple faculty members, to which the students must then respond. Satisfies general education synthesis requirement.

418 Women's Life History (3:3:0). Prerequisites: Completion of 60 credits and ANTH 114. Examination of ethnographic life histories of women, generally written to exemplify typical life patterns within a given cultural tradition, and selected autobiographies recording extraordinary lives. These two genres are considered keys to the relationship between individual uniqueness and shared culture, and the ways in which particular individuals resolve tensions inherent in a cultural milieu.

420 Interpretation in Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: 6 credits of anthropology including ANTH 120 or permission of instructor. Exploration of theoretical and methodological issues encountered in archaeology. Patterns and contexts of archaeological remains, analytic problems, and interpretation of material culture are considered.

425 Public Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: 6 credits of anthropology including ANTH 120 or permission of instructor. Consideration of the public significance of archaeology and anthropological contributions to public concerns such as antiquities legislation and cultural resource management.

427 Historic Cemetery Survey (4:4:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 120 or permission of instructor. Exploration of demographic, stylistic, and religious aspects of historic cemeteries. Students learn to survey, record, and analyze gravestone data through field projects.

428 Patterns in Prehistory (3:3:0). Prerequisite: 60 credits or permission of instructor. Exploration of the diversity of prehistoric cultures in light of major cultural development (hunting-gathering, agriculture, pastoralism, complex societies).

430 Research Methods in Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Archaeological research process is studied through discussions of current archaeological methodologies and through student participation in designing and critiquing research projects.

435, 436 Special Projects: Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (1-3:0:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 120 or 135, 60 credits, and permission of instructor. Lab or field project leading to a written report of the research. Research and paper are completed under the instructor's guidance.

440 Applied Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 114, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Focus on anthropologists' contributions to major policy issues in development agencies in the United States and abroad. Attention to techniques that lead to prevention or management of social and cultural conflict.

450 Qualitative Methods in Sociocultural Research (3:3:0). Prerequisites: 60 credits and 6 credits of anthropology including ANTH 114, or permission of instructor. Exploration of some of the most useful nonquantitative research techniques used in social sciences and practice in their application.

488 Gender, Sexuality, and Culture (3:3:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 340, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Examination of how gender, sexuality, race, and class come together as analytically distinct, yet practically interwined, systems of meaning and practice. Examples highlight questions of political economy and history while focusing on specific ethnographic or historical readings.

490 Theories, Methods, and Issues II (3:3:0). Prerequisites: 60 credits and 9 credits of anthropology including ANTH 390, or permission of instructor. Second part of a two-course sequence that reviews the major theoretical traditions and schools of thought in anthropology. Required for anthropology majors and usually taken as a senior seminar.

492 Contemporary Controversies in Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisites: 60 credits and 9 credits of anthropology including ANTH 390, or permission of instructor. Examination of recent important works, issues, and controversies in anthropology.

495 Internship (3-6:0:0). Prerequisite: ANTH 120, 60 credits, or permission of instructor. Supervised project in applying anthropology (i.e., public archaeology, development anthropology, museums). May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits.

496 On Evolution (4:2:2). Prerequisites: 60 credits and 9 credits of anthropology including ANTH 340, or permission of instructor. Course considers evolution as a biological as well as cultural concept. Parallels and contrasts among conceptual approaches allow a critique of the potential of evolution as a unifying biosocial theory.

499 Independent Research (1-3:0:0). Prerequisite: 60 credits, 9 credits of anthropology, or permission of instructor. Individual research on a topic to be organized in advance by student and instructor. May be repeated for credit.

535 Anthropology and the Human Condition (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing or permission of instructor. Examination of contemporary human problems from cross-cultural and biocultural perspectives. Historical background and future implications of current cultural and biocultural issues are discussed.

560 Human Osteology (4:3:3). Prerequisites: Course in human evolution or anatomy and senior or graduate standing, or permission of instructor. Examination of the structure and function of the human skeletal system. Discussions include age criteria, pathology, epigenetic traits, biomechanics, and phylogenetic relationships.

568 Human Origins (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing or permission of instructor. Detailed survey of the genetic, morphological, and behavioral origins of hominids. Current interpretations and debates are discussed.

580 Evolution and Human Ecology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing or permission of instructor. Examination of the complex relationships among human cultures, biocultural adaptation, and the natural world from an evolutionary perspective.

620 Theory: Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Course in archaeology or permission of instructor. Examination of theoretical approaches in archaeology, paleoanthropology, and biological anthropology.

625 Research Design and Methods in Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Course in archaeology or permission of instructor. Examination of the research strategies and methods in archaeology, paleoanthropology, and biological anthropology.

630 Anthropology and Humanitarian Action (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing. Examination of humanitarian action from an anthropological perspective, with attention to the cultural, biological, environmental, and political dimensions of humanitarian crises and the actual and potential responses to them.

631 Refugees in the Contemporary World (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing. Seminar on the major refugee flows in the second half of the 20th century, with emphasis on the mechanisms for providing assistance, asylum, and resettlement.

670 Regional Studies in Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Regional survey of specific culture area in archaeology to be chosen by student and instructor.

675 Laboratory Techniques (4:3:3). Prerequisite: Course in archaeology and permission of instructor. Techniques of data collection, analysis, and management in archaeology and biological anthropology.

680 Readings in Archaeology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Directed readings and research on a specific topic in archaeology to be chosen by student and instructor. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits.

682 Readings in Biological Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Directed readings and research on a specific topic in biological anthropology chosen by student and instructor. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits.

684 Readings in Cultural Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Directed reading and research on a specific topic in cultural anthropology chosen by student and instructor. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits.

710 Contemporary Issues in Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (3:3:0). Prerequisites: ANTH 620, ANTH 625, completion of 24 graduate credits, and approval of graduate advisor. Contemporary research developments and the ways in which various scientific disciplines and theoretical approaches are integrated in the study of biocultural evolution, adaptation, and diversity.

750 Ethnographic Genres (3:3:0). Prerequisite: Graduate standing or permission of instructor. "Genre" refers to kind, sort, or type. Course surveys the various modes of representation anthropologists use in elaborating participant-observation field work, as well as how these styles refer to and construct the ethnographic other. It thus explores a set of central philosophical and methodological issues in social-cultural anthropology (e.g., framing, perspective, authority, reflexivity, the politics of style).