COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course is an introduction to social or cultural anthropology. It is not, however, a survey course which attempts to cover briefly all the important topics in the field. The goal of the course is to explore in depth one of the fundamental insights that the anthropological study of human cultures has to offer: the insight that the reality we inhabit is socially or culturally constructed. People who live in different cultures, in other words, inhabit different realities.
The course begins with readings on the discipline of anthropology, anthropological fieldwork, and colonialism, which introduce the concepts of cultural relativity and ethnocentrism. We then read an important theoretical statement of the argument for the social construction of reality and test it by considering the proposition that both racial categories and gender categories do not reflect biological reality but are social constructs that vary from culture to culture.
After discussing the very different ways people in different cultures deal with the universal biological experience of birth, we examine anthropological approaches to the study of symbols and rituals. Finally, we read a detailed study of one tribal society that raises important issues about the responsibilities anthropologists have to the people they study in a rapidly changing world. This syllabus is available on line on the world wide web at http://abacus.bates.edu/Faculty/Anthropology/Anthro101/Anthro101.html. It can also be reached from the Bates Home Page (www.bates.edu) by clicking on Academics, then going through Departments and Programs, Anthropology and Courses Offered. There are links from the web site containing the syllabus to other web sites where required readings for the course can be found.
After most readings you will find some discussion questions. Please look at these questions before doing the assigned readings and think about them as you read and again afterward. These and other issues will form the basis for class discussion. Readings should be completed before class on the date indicated.
Anthropology 101 is a component course in the Women's Studies Program.
Achebe, Things Fall Apart
Berger and Luckmann, The Social Construction of Reality
Jordan, Birth in Four Cultures
Turner, The Forest of Symbols
Chagnon, Yanomamo
Course Pack
TOPICS AND READINGS
January 6
Organization of the Course
January 8
"What is Anthropology" and "Careers in Anthropology"
Both are available in the course pack and on the world wide web at: http://www.aaanet.org/anthbroc.htm and http://www.aaanet.org/careersbroch.htm
Video: Anthropologists at Work: Careers Making a Difference
Browse the American Anthropological Assoc. home page at: http://www.aaanet.org
- Why is it important to study other cultures?
- What are some of the skills anthropologists develop?
- How could an anthropologist make Bates a better place to live and work?
2. The Nature of Anthropological Inquiry: Cultural Relativity, Ethnocentrism, and the Concept of Culture
January 10
Bohannan, "Shakespeare in the Bush." Course pack.
Miner, "Body Ritual Among the Nacirema." Course pack.
- Why is the Bohannan article humorous?
- Is Bohannan's position anthropologically sound? Is the Tiv's?
- Does Hamlet have the same meaning for the Tiv and for Bohannan?
- What does it mean to say anthropologists are engaged in "cultural translation"?
- Can you translate "ghost" into the language of the Tiv?
- What is your reaction to the Nacirema and their culture?
- Does Miner's analysis of Nacirema body rituals constitute good anthropology?
- How do you think the Nacirema themselves would react to Miner's analysis?
January 13
Achebe, Things Fall Apart, pp. 3-109.
- Is Things Fall Apart fiction or non-fiction? Does it matter?
- Is Things Fall Apart an account of an insider or an outsider with respect to Ibo culture? Whose account would be more objective?
- What do we learn about gender roles in Ibo culture from Things Fall Apart?
- How can you make sense of Ibo practices such as the oracle, Ezinma's case; and rain making? Is this magic, superstition, or religion?
January 15
Achebe, pp. 110-209.
- Can Ibo gods harm people?
- Why do "Things Fall Apart?" Could the tragic events portrayed here have been avoided? How?
- What role does anthropology have to play in such situations?
- Who converts to Christianity? Why?
January 17
Discussion
Websites:
Fact Sheet on the Ogoni Struggle
http://www.ratical.org/corporations/OgoniFactS.htmlThe Ogoni Experience
http://www.maanystavat.fi/oileng/charity.htmKen Saro-Wiwa
http://www.greenpeace.org/~comms/ken/Shell Nigeria
http://www.shellnigeria.com/January 20
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day - Workshop on Somali refugees sponsored by the Department of Anthropology
3. The Social Construction of Reality
January 22
Berger and Luckmann, The Social Construction of Reality, pp. 1-53.
- What is the nature of everyday reality?
- What is the relationship between objective and subjective reality?
- What is the role of language in the social construction of reality? Are we "prisoners" of the language we speak?
- What is the difference between the way beavers and human beings build dams?
- Is there such a thing as human nature? If so, what is it?
- What is the relationship between biological factors (nature) and cultural factors (nurture) in human social life?
January 24
Berger and Luckmann, pp. 53-128.
- What is the difference between objectification and reification?
- What are some examples of institutionalization?
How are the following relationships legitimated in American culture:
- The relationship between a 10 year old child and the adult male living with the child?
- The relationship between a 40 year old person and the person he or she is "living with?"
- Relationships between humans and animals?
- Relationships between men and women?
- Relationships between the "races"?
January 27
Before reading the assignment, write down answers to these questions:
- How many races exist?
- Name them.
- What is the definition of "race"?
Molnar, Human Variation, Chapter 1, "Racial Variation and the Perception of Human Differences." Reserve.
After reading the assignment, write down answers to these questions:
- Do races exist?
- What exactly does that mean?
- What is the definition of "race"?
Additional questions for discussion:
- How do humans vary biologically?
- What is the difference between a "race" and an ethnic group?
- What is the difference between a "race" and a breeding population?
- What is the relationship between everyday common sense, or "folk" categories and scientific categories?
- What does it mean to say "races" exist? How do "races" exist?
- Are you a racist if you classify people into races or if you believe races exist?
January 29
Brace, "A Four Letter Word Called 'Race." Course pack.
January 31
Packet of Readings on "Race" and Ethnicity. Reserve.
"Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity." Course pack.
- Are the categories used in the U.S. for census or affirmative action purposes "scientifically valid"?
- Should they be changed? Why? How?
- What is the difference between a "race" and an ethnic group? Are Hispanics a "race" or an ethnic group?
- How does reading about "racial" categories in South Africa change your view on the existence of races?
- Do you think a person can change "race"?
- How do you determine a person's "race"? Is "descent" or "appearance" more important?
February 3
Kessler and McKenna, Gender, Preface and Chapters 1 and 2. Reserve.
- "Race" and "sex" (or "gender") are both categories we assign people to. What are the similarities and differences between these two categories?
- Do "sexes" or "genders" exist? How many are there?
- How do you determine a person's "sex" or "gender"?
- According to Kessler and McKenna, what is the difference between a person's gender attribution, gender assignment, gender identity, and gender role?
- How would you translate berdache into English?
- If you were an anthropologist studying the berdache, what questions would you ask to learn about it?
February 3
Evening Film: The Crying Game
February 5
Kessler and McKenna, Chapters 3 and 5.
- What is the relationship between biological and cultural factors in shaping various aspects of a persons gender (identity, role, attribution)?
- Can a person change "sex" or "gender"?
- What happens when a person's gender identity and gender assignment conflict?
- What does it mean to say we are all "passing" as males or females?
- How does the study of transsexuals or intersexuals change the way you think about gender?
February 7
Kessler and McKenna, Chapter 6 and Appendix.
Bloom, The Body Lies. Reserve.
Websites:
The Room for the Wrongly Gender Assigned
http://www.gn.apc.org/inquirer/gender_intro.html
Intersex Society of North America
http://www.isna.org/Medical Treatment of Hermaphroditism
http://www.gn.apc.org/inquirer/intersex.htmlPress for Change
http://www.pfc.org.uk/February 10
Discussion
February 12
Jordan, Birth in Four Cultures, pp. 3-44.
- What is the difference between a biosocial and a biomedical approach to the study of childbirth?
- Is "giving birth" like "being sick"? Is birth "pathological"?
- What does it mean that in the US birth is defined as a medical event?
- Are American medical obstetrics "better than" or "superior to" traditional Mayan childbirth practices?
- What is an ethno-anatomical organ?
- Why have women giving birth in American hospitals traditionally been placed in the lithotomy position? Is this science or culture?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of Mayan and American childbirth practices?
February 14
FIRST SHORT PAPER DUE
In Class Film: The Birth Experience
Websites:
ASPO/Lamaze http://www.lamaze-childbirth.com/
Read: FAQJordan, pp. 44-90.
- If you or your partner were to give birth, would you want to give birth at home or in a hospital? Why? With an obstetrician or a midwife in attendance? Why? With or without pain medication? Why?
- What is the relationship between gender and power in American childbirth practices?
- What is the relationship between medical science and American culture?
- What is "natural" about "natural childbirth"?
February 24
Jordan, pp. 91-146.
- What ethical issues confront an anthropologist studying childbirth?
- How does the use of video equipment change the nature of fieldwork?
- Are video recordings more "objective" than field notes?
- Can female anthropologists gather "more valid data" on childbirth than male anthropologists? Why?
- How could an anthropologist improve the quality of infant and maternal health among the Maya?
February 26
Discussion
7. Ritual and Symbolism
February 28
Turner, Chapters I and II.
- What does the milk tree mean to the Ndembu?
- How do symbols convey meaning?
- Who decides what symbols mean, the anthropologist or members of the culture the anthropologist is studying?
- Can symbols have unconscious meanings? If so, how can anthropologists study them?
- What does the song Puff the Magic Dragon mean?
Puff the Magic Dragon
Puff
the Magic Dragon lived by the sea
and frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honahlee.
Little Jackie Paper loved that rascal Puff
and brought him strings and ceiling wax and other fancy stuff.
Together they would travel on a boat with billowed sail.
Jackie kept a lookout perched on Puff's gigantic tail.
Noble kings and princes would bow when ere they came.
Pirate ships would lower their flag when Puff roared out his name.
A dragon
lives forever, but not so little boys.
Painted wings and giant strings make way for other toys.
One gray night it happened. Jackie Paper came no more,
and Puff that mighty dragon, he ceased his fearless roar.
His head was bent in sorrow. Green scales fell like rain
Puff no longer went to play along the cherry lane.
Without his lifelong friend Puff could not be brave.
So Puff that might dragon sadly slipped into his cave.
- Is the meaning of a text determined by the intention of the author or the interpretation of the reader?
- Can a person engage in sexual harassment without intending to?
March 3
This We Believe. This We Live. The Baltimore Catechism, "The Eucharist." Lessons 26 - 28. Course pack.
Website:
Inexplicable Eucharistic Phenomena
http://members.aol.com/bjw1106/euchmir.htm
- What does the sacrament of the Eucharist mean?
- Why do Christians take communion?
- How would you respond to an anthropologist who interpreted the Eucharist as an example of both cannibalism and human sacrifice? Would this be a good interpretation of the rite?
- Analyze the Eucharistic miracles described on the web site.
March 3
Evening Film: Walt Disney's Snow White
March 5
Turner, Chapter III.
Magoun and Krappe, The Grimm's German Folktales, "Snow White." Course pack.
Sexton, "Snow White." Course pack.
- What do the colors black, white, and red mean to the Ndembu?
- Are they universal symbols? Why?
- What do black, white and red mean in Snow White?
- What do we learn about American and European attitudes toward women and sexuality from the analysis of Snow White?
- How is Disney's version of Snow White different from the Grimm's version? Can you explain these differences?
March 7
Turner, Chapter IV.
3 short readings on hazing by Bushweller, Sorrell and Alfred University. Course pack.
Kovic, Born on the Fourth of July, pp. 63-79. Course pack.
Videos: Haze Days ESPN Outside the Lines: Hazing
- What are the component parts of a rite of passage?
- How do rites of passage work? What do they do?
- How can liminal things be disgusting and sacred?
- Think about the effectiveness of rites of passage you have witnessed or participated in.
- What is the distinction between initiation and hazing? Which category does Basic Training in the Marines belong to? Why?
March 10
Discussion
8. Ethnographic Analysis: The Yanomamo of the Amazon Basin
March 12
Chagnon, Yanomamo, Forward, Preface, Prologue and Chapter 1, pp. v-43.
In Class Film: A Man Called "Bee": Studying the Yanomamo
- What image does The Man Called "Bee" present of the anthropologist?
- Are the Yanomamo similar to or different from Americans? Does the film emphasize the similarities or the differences?
- Are the Yanomamo "naked"?
- What are the power relationships established by the film between Chagnon, the Yanomamo, and students in this course?
- Comment on the film's claim that "when we look at the Yanomamo we see a glimpse into our past. We see ourselves several times removed, but ourselves nonetheless."
- Comment on the films claim that teaching skills in war is the most important skill for the Yanomamo as a sovereign people to pass on to their children.
March 14
Chagnon, Chapter 2, pp. 45-97.
March 17
SECOND SHORT PAPER DUE
Chagnon, Chapter 8, pp. 227-260.
In Class Film: Contact: Yanomamo of Brazil
- Compare this film to The Man Called "Bee". How does it change your perception of the Yanomamo?
- Are the Yanomamo a sovereign people?
- What can be done to keep "Things From Falling Apart" for the Yanomamo as they did for the Ibo?
March 19
"Correspondence." Course pack.
"Forward to Fourth Edition." Course pack.
Tierney, "The Fierce Anthropologist," New Yorker, October 9, 2000. Reserve.Websites:
Information on Darkness in El Dorado
http://www.anth.uconn.edu/gradstudents/dhume/darkness_in_el_dorado/index.htmYanomamo People Face Risks
http://www.aaanet.org/press/pryano1212.htmAAA and Human Rights
http://www.aaanet.org/committees/cfhr/index.htm
- Whose side do you take in the dispute between Carneiro da Cunha and Chagnon? Why?
- Is Chagnon responsible for the mass media's sensationalization of his work?
- Are the Yanomamo a "Fierce People"?
- Was Chagnon right to have eliminated the subtitle "The Fierce People" from his book?
- Do you believe Tierney's charges against Chagnon? Why?
March 21
Chagnon, Chapter 3 and 4, pp. 99-157.
In Class Film: The Axe Fight
Websites:
Kinship and Social Organization: An Interactive Tutorial
http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/anthropology/kintitle.htmlGo to "Begin Tutorial" and "Yanomamo" which is at:
http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/anthropology/tutor/case_studies/yanomamo
- What are the basic principles of the Yanomamo kinship system?
- Who can a Yanomamo marry?
- What is the relationship between kinship and biology?
March 24
Chagnon, Chapter 5, pp. 159-183.
Yanomamo Interactive: The Axe Fight (on CD-ROM)
- What is the relationship between kinship and politics in Yanomamo culture?
- In political conflicts, how do Yanomamo decide which side to take?
- Why do Yanomamo in one village trade with Yanomamo in another village?
March 26
Chagnon, Chapters 6 and 7, pp. 185-226.
Yanomamo Interactive: The Axe Fight (on CD-ROM)March 28
Chagnon, Chapter 8, pp. 227-260.
March 31
Discussion
April 2
Discussion
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
SCHEDULE OF DUE DATES
Late papers will be graded down unless an extension has been granted.
| February 14 | FIRST SHORT PAPER |
| March 17 | SECOND SHORT PAPER |
| April 8 | TAKE HOME FINAL EXAMINATION (Handed out April 4.) |
SHORT PAPERS
The first short paper should deal with the readings on "race," Gender by Kessler and McKenna, or The Social Construction of Reality by Berger and Luckmann. The second paper should deal with Jordan's Birth in Four Cultures or Turner's The Forest of Symbols. For these short papers, students may choose to write a critical review of the assigned readings. This should not be a book report summarizing the reading, but an original analytical comment on, or a reaction to, a major point in one of the readings.
Most students, however, choose to write another kind of paper, a paper in which they apply one of the interpretive approaches presented in the assigned readings to some phenomenon of their own culture that they are familiar with from their own personal experience. The goal of this type of paper is for students to use an anthropological theory or method of analysis to discover something new and interesting about an aspect of their own culture that they could not have discovered without the benefit of the anthropological readings from the course. It is essential that students state clearly and thoroughly the theoretical perspective they are using in their paper. Students should avoid summarizing, describing, and stating the obvious. They should get beneath the surface of things and offer an interpretation of what the ritual, institution, social relationship, fairy tale, or television show means. Several classes (including those on The Crying Game, the Eucharist, Snow White, basic training, and childbirth in the US) will be devoted to just such projects. There are several examples of good student papers on reserve for you to consult while preparing your own paper. Here is a sample outline for the short paper assignment:
I. Introduction (one paragraph) II. Theoretical approach (one page) III. Ethnographic description (one page) IV. Analysis, in which the theoretical approach is applied in order to interpret the ethnographic data (two pages) V. Conclusion (one paragraph)
PLEASE NOTE: