USC Catalogue 2016-2017 [ARCHIVED CATALOGUE]
Anthropology
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Return to: USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
The Department of Anthropology offers a BA in Anthropology with tracks in cultural anthropology, medical anthropology and biological anthropology; a BA in Anthropology with a concentration in visual anthropology; a BA in Global Studies; minor programs in cultural anthropology, medical anthropology, folklore and popular culture; an MA in Anthropology; a certificate in visual anthropology; a progressive master’s degree in visual anthropology; and a PhD in Anthropology. The Department of Anthropology encourages students to become involved in ethnographic research and fieldwork while gaining a firm theoretical foundation in anthropology. Special areas of emphasis in the department are provided by visual anthropology, biocultural approaches to human evolution, a medical anthropology program that examines the body, illness and healing from a cultural perspective, a folklore oriented course of study that links cultural practice to interpretive strategies and a newly initiated Global Studies major that seeks to provide conceptualizations of linkages of the global with the local. All of these topical interests are unified by a methodological approach that puts ethnography at the core and views personally experienced fieldwork as the foundation of our academic discipline.
Grace Ford Salvatori 120
(213) 740-1900
FAX: (213) 747-8571
Email: anthro@dornsife.usc.edu
Chair: Gary Seaman, PhD
Faculty
University Professor and ARCO/William F. Kieschnick Chair in the Neurobiology of Aging and Professor of Gerontology, Biological Sciences, Anthropology and Psychology: Caleb E. Finch, PhD (Gerontology)
Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities, Linda and Harlan Martens Director of the Early Modern Studies Institute and Professor of History and Anthropology: Peter C. Mancall, PhD (History)
Albert G. and Frances Lomas Feldman Professor of Social Policy and Health: Lawrence Palinkas, PhD (Social Work)
Professors: Eugene Cooper, PhD; Gelya Frank, PhD (Occupational Science); Janet Hoskins, PhD; Dorinne Kondo, PhD (American Studies); Nancy Lutkehaus, PhD; Cheryl Mattingly, PhD; Alison Renteln, PhD (Political Science); Andrei Simic, PhD; Craig Stanford, PhD* (Biological Sciences)
Associate Professors: Lanita Jacobs, PhD; Gary Seaman, PhD
Adjunct Professor: Jane Goodall, PhD
Adjunct Professor of the Practice: Andre Singer, PhD
Professor (Teaching): Erin Moore, PhD
Associate Professors (Teaching): Tok Thompson, PhD; Thomas Ward, PhD
Assistant Professor (Teaching): Thomas Garrison, PhD
Emeritus Professor: G. Alexander Moore, PhD
Associate Professor Emerita: Joan Weibel-Orlando, PhD
*Recipient of university-wide or college teaching award.
Undergraduate Degrees
Interdisciplinary Law and Society Minor
See the Department of Political Science .
Minor in Photography and Social Change
See Sociology .
Graduate Programs
The Center for Visual Anthropology
The primary goals of the Center for Visual Anthropology (CVA) are: to promote the incorporation of visual modes of expression into the academic discipline of anthropology; to promote mutual understanding and collaboration between professionals in the visual media and in anthropology; to create an awareness of the anthropological perspective in documentaries produced for mass audiences; to improve the materials and techniques available for using film in teaching anthropology; to encourage the collection, archiving and analysis of visual documentation for anthropological research. The Ethnographics laboratory is a part of the Center for Visual Anthropology, which provides archival and computer facilities for students and faculty who work with non linear editing systems and interactive media in anthropology. The primary mission of the Ethnographics Lab is to promote the integration of all forms of information, whether text, graphics of time-based media, into a new synthesis of anthropological knowledge. It provides support for research and representation in multimedia formats carried out in a new laboratory facility based on computer AV technologies and software.
The Jane Goodall Research Center is the designated repository of field data from Jane Goodall’s work among the primates of Gombe National Park in Tanzania. A computer interactive multimedia archive of these materials is being implemented to make them available to students, faculty and other interested scholars.
Facilities
The CVA housed at the Social Science Building on the USC campus and at the C-Lab, is equipped with - broadcast-quality production and editing facilities in video.
These include Super 8 systems and highband 3/4″ as well as 1/2″ videos. Editing facilities include Super 8 editors, JVC 1/2″ editing systems, a Sony 3/4″ time code system, an online editing system and an AVID system. Editing and viewing facilities are also located in the School of Cinematic Arts. The CVA maintains a complete still photography lab and darkroom.
Policy on Films and Videos Produced by Students
All films and videos produced with school equipment, funding or facilities are the property of USC. Any income from distribution of student-produced films and videos will be used for the benefit of CVA students through production budgets, equipment purchases or scholarships.
Bachelor’s Degree
Minor
Master’s Degree
University Certificate
Doctoral Degree
Anthropology
- • ANTH 101g Illness and Healing: The Cross-Cultural Perspective
- • ANTH 105g Culture, Medicine and Politics
- • ANTH 125g Social Issues in Human Sexuality and Reproduction
- • ANTH 140g Mesoamerican Cosmovision and Culture
- • ANTH 200Lg The Human Animal
- • ANTH 201g Principles of Human Organization
- • ANTH 202 g Archaeology: Our Human Past
- • ANTH 205g Introduction to Global Studies and Overseas Research
- • ANTH 225 Gender, Sex, and Science: A Gender Studies Approach
- • ANTH 235g The Changing Pacific: History, Culture, Politics
- • ANTH 240gm Collective Identity and Political Violence: 9/11
- • ANTH 250g Race and Sexual Politics in Southeast Asia
- • ANTH 263g Exploring Culture through Film
- • ANTH 273g Shamans, Spirits and Ancestors: Non-Western Religious Traditions
- • ANTH 300 Evolution, Ecology, and Culture
- • ANTH 301 The Performance of Healing
- • ANTH 302 Humans and Ancient Environments
- • ANTH 303 Exploring Ancient Ways of Living: Experimental Archaeology
- • ANTH 304 Prehistoric Archaeology
- • ANTH 305 Childhood, Birth and Reproduction
- • ANTH 306 Primate Social Behavior and Ecology
- • ANTH 308 Origins and Evolution of Human Behavior
- • ANTH 310 Archaeology of the Americas
- • ANTH 311 Old World Archaeology
- • ANTH 314g The Nature of Maya Civilization
- • ANTH 315g North American Indians
- • ANTH 316gmp North American Indians in American Public Life
- • ANTH 317 Imaging Indians: From Warriors to Windtalkers
- • ANTH 320 Male and Female in Pacific Society
- • ANTH 322 Anthropology of Bali
- • ANTH 323 Southeast Asian Cultures Today: Globalization and Multiple Modernities
- • ANTH 324 Regional Ethnology: China
- • ANTH 325 Global Studies Research Methods
- • ANTH 326 Ethnography of European Culture
- • ANTH 327 Anthropology of the Middle East and Islam
- • ANTH 328m Culture Change and the Mexican People
- • ANTH 329 Archaeology and Global Cultural Heritage
- • ANTH 330m Culture, Gender and Politics in South Asia
- • ANTH 332g Anthropology and Narrative Medicine
- • ANTH 333gm Forms of Folklore
- • ANTH 335 Comparative Muslim Societies
- • ANTH 336 Health, Gender and Ethnicity
- • ANTH 337 Anthropology of Warfare
- • ANTH 345 Politics, Social Organization, and Law
- • ANTH 355 Urban Anthropology
- • ANTH 357g Cultures of Genocide
- • ANTH 360 Symbolic Anthropology
- • ANTH 365 Life History in Anthropological Perspective
- • ANTH 370 Family and Kinship in Cross- Cultural Perspective
- • ANTH 371gm Cross-Cultural Research on Urban Gangs
- • ANTH 372 Interpretation of Myth and Narrative
- • ANTH 373 Magic, Witchcraft and Healing
- • ANTH 374 Asian Americans: Ethnic Identity
- • ANTH 375 Applied Anthropology
- • ANTH 376 Scientific Analysis in Archaeology
- • ANTH 380 Sex and Gender in Anthropological Perspective
- • ANTH 385 m Men and Masculinity
- • ANTH 390 Special Problems
- • ANTH 395 m African American Humor and Culture
- • ANTH 400 Maya Resilience: Constructing Past and Present Identities
- • ANTH 405 Evolutionary Medicine
- • ANTH 406 Theory and Method in Human Evolutionary Biology
- • ANTH 407 Peasant Society
- • ANTH 409 Indigenous Languages in the Contemporary World
- • ANTH 410a Ethnographic Field Methods and Practicum
- • ANTH 410b Ethnographic Field Methods and Practicum
- • ANTH 415 Global Studies Senior Seminar
- • ANTH 420 Woman, Nature, Culture: The Behavioral Ecology of Women
- • ANTH 425 Peoples and Cultures of Latin America
- • ANTH 435 x Ethnic Diversity in China/Inner Asia
- • ANTH 440 History of Anthropological Theory
- • ANTH 445 African American Anthropology
- • ANTH 450 Field Research in Maya Archaeology
- • ANTH 460 Economic Anthropology
- • ANTH 465 Archaeology and Society
- • ANTH 470 Multidisciplinary Seminar in Visual Anthropology
- • ANTH 472 Visual Techniques in Anthropology: Stills
- • ANTH 475 Ethnographic Film Analysis
- • ANTH 476 Ethnographic Film Theory from an Historical Perspective
- • ANTH 481 L GIS for Archaeologists
- • ANTH 490x Directed Research
- • ANTH 491 Directed Research for Honors
- • ANTH 499 Special Topics
- • ANTH 501 History and Foundations of Anthropology
- • ANTH 502 Contemporary Theory in Anthropology
- • ANTH 503 Regional Ethnography
- • ANTH 506 Primate Behavior and Sociobiology
- • ANTH 509 Key Topics in Linguistic Anthropology
- • ANTH 510 Urban Anthropology
- • ANTH 554 Women in Global Perspective
- • ANTH 562 The Practice of Ethnography
- • ANTH 575 Seminar in Ethnographic Film
- • ANTH 576L Anthropological Media Seminar
- • ANTH 577L Advanced Anthropological Media Seminar
- • ANTH 590 Directed Research
- • ANTH 593 Practicum in Teaching the Liberal Arts
- • ANTH 594a Master’s Thesis
- • ANTH 594b Master’s Thesis
- • ANTH 594z Master’s Thesis
- • ANTH 599 Special Topics
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