2025-2026 University Catalog
|
ANTH 211 - Ethnographic Methods Introduces students to the research methods that anthropologists use to study human beings in all their complexity: the range of qualitative, in-depth, and participatory techniques that comprise ethnography. Through a series of hands-on active research projects, students learn how to investigate the complex social world we live in, and analyze what they find. Coursework covers the research process from asking compelling questions, to collecting qualitative data and critically analyzing it, to choosing how to present it. Coursework also addresses the ethical implications and responsibilities that accompany learning about human beings by interacting with them, and then representing them to others. The readings, lectures, and discussions explore how anthropological knowledge is generated and anthropology’s relationship to political-economic power, historical experience, and personal identity. Students also gain valuable research methods skills for career choices.
Credits: 1.00 Corequisite: None Prerequisites: or or Major/Minor Restrictions: None Class Restriction: No Senior Area of Inquiry: Social Relations,Inst.& Agents Liberal Arts Practices: The Process of Writing Core Component: None Formerly: SOAN 211
Click here for Course Offerings by term
|