ANTH6519 Social Animals: anthropological perspectives on animal-human relationships
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Offered By
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School of Archaeology & Anthropology
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Academic Career
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Graduate Coursework
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Course Subject
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Anthropology
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Offered in
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Second Semester, 2009
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Unit Value
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6 units
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Course Description
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This course explores animal-human relationships from a multiply of theoretical perspectives to explore the various positions that animals occupy in human (as pets, food, friends, enemies, beings with rights, organ donors and spectacles of nature). It also introduces students to some of the theoretical cornerstones (and classic readings) of the discipline of Anthropology. What are animals? How do we classify them? What sorts of relationships do animals have to humans? What can the anthropological exploration of animals and their relationships to humans tell us about ourselves? Animals and their relationships with people have been of interest to anthropologists for a long time, and some theoreticians have even suggested that the anthropological exploring animal-human relationships allows the discipline to come to terms with its colonial past. Early understandings of animals focused on their sustenance and symbolic value, and structuralist perspectives placed animals centrally in marriage and other systems of great importance to human social lives. More recent approaches have retained the notion that animals are important because they offer insight into human conceptualisations of and actions in the world. These approaches, which arise from a multiply of theoretical perspectives, have attempted to nuance old dichotomies and to look into the interesting and sometimes conflicting positions that animals occupy as pets, food, friends, enemies, beings with rights, organ donors and spectacles of nature. |
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Learning Outcomes
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Students will develop analytic and critical thinking skills as well as increasing research and writing capacity.
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Indicative Assessment
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major essay (6000 words 65%); tutorial presentation (20%); tutorial participation (10%); tutorial attendance (5%)
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Workload
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22 lectures over 11 weeks (1 * 2 hour lecture per week) + weekly tutorials + 1-3 hours of personal study per week.
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Preliminary Reading
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None is required, but students will benefit from reading the following texts: Mullins, M. 2002 ‘Animals in Anthropology' Society and Animals vol 10 (4) pp 378-393. Mullin, M. 1999 ‘Mirrors and Windows: Sociocultural Studies of Human-Animal Relationships' Annual Review of Anthropology 28 201-24. Bulliet, R. 2005 Hunters, Herders, and Hamburgers: The Past and Future of Human-Animal Relationships. Col.:Columbia UP
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Academic Contact
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Dr Simone Dennis
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The information published on the Study at ANU 2009 website applies to the 2009 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2008 website.