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ANTH2025 Gender in Cross-Cultural Perspective

Later Year Course

Offered By School of Archaeology and Anthropology
Academic Career Undergraduate
Course Subject Anthropology
Offered in First Semester, 2011 and First Semester, 2012
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

Anthropology is uniquely situated to look into concepts and theories of gender, sex and sexuality through its concern with the culturally-specific character of human categories and practices. This course explores gender, sex and sexuality across a range of cultural settings seeking, in the process, to question most of what we - including most theorists of sex/gender - take for granted about the gendered and sexed character of human identity and difference. Topics explored include: the saliency of the categories man and woman; the relationships between race and gender; the role of colonialism and neocolonialism in the representation of gender, sex and sexuality; the usefulness of the notion of oppression; the relationship between cultural conceptions of personhood and cultural conceptions of gender; and the ethnocentricity of the concepts of gender, sex and sexuality themselves. To assist these explorations we will make use of cross-cultural case studies in a number of areas including rape, prostitution, work and domesticity, the third sex and homosexuality.

Learning Outcomes  

On completion of this course, students will have gained the following:

  • 1) An understanding of the diversity of knowledges and practices pertaining to sex/gender found throughout the world;
  • 2) The analytic and critical skills necessary to interrogate and deconstruct assumptions about sex/gender found in contemporary western societies (including Australia);
  • 3) A grasp of key issues in the anthropology of gender, including the relationship between race and gender, the role of colonialism and neo-colonialism in the creation of gender categories, the ethnocentricity of the concept of ‘oppression', and the problems associated with the categories of ‘man' and ‘woman';
  • 4) The ability to analyse, from different cultural perspectives, a range of gendered practices including rape, prostitution, veiling, clitoridectomy and the third sex.
Indicative Assessment

Tutorial attendance and participation (15%), 1,500-2,000 word essay (40%) and take-home exam�(45%).

Workload

2 hours of lectures and one hour of tutorial per week

Areas of Interest Anthropology
Requisite Statement

Two first-year courses to the value of 12 units in Anthropology; or Sociology; or Gender Sexuality and Culture.

Majors/Specialisations Anthropology, Gender, Sexuality and Culture, Development Studies, and Gender, Sexuality and Culture
Academic Contact Dr Christine Helliwell

The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.

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