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ANTH8036 Forms of Sociality

Offered By School of Archaeology and Anthropology
Academic Career Graduate Coursework
Course Subject Anthropology
Offered in ANTH8036 will not be offered in 2011
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

The social relations anthropologists study in the world’s cultures have traditionally been categorised under major headings, although they all depend upon actions by and between persons. These categories—kinship, descent, economics, religion, politics—have sometimes been thought to mark significant social kinds susceptible to specific explanatory modelling, although they have also been criticised as ethnographically inauthentic or of no more than typological value. The course aims to familiarise students with the range of classical and contemporary approaches to the issue of sociality and its empirical and institutional forms.

Drawing on the expertise of the different specialists in the Anthropology Graduate Study Field at the ANU, and using extensive ethnographic cases, the course will cover:

Agency; social action; transactionalism; reciprocity and exchange; kinship and descent group theory; local- and macro-level politics; forms of leadership and stratification; gender relations; religious and ritual action.

Students will also be expected to gain an understanding of the manner in which different theoretical approaches (functionalism, structuralism, interactionism, etc) have tackled these topics, in both theoretical and ethnographic writings.

Indicative Assessment

Class presentation (25%), major essay (40%) and exam (35%).

Workload

Three contact hours per week

Areas of Interest Anthropology
Academic Contact To be advised

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.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions