AN273 Half Unit
Thinking as an Anthropologist
This information is for the 2025/26 session.
Course Convenor
Prof Sylvia Yanagisako
Availability
This course is available on the BA in Anthropology and Law, BA in Social Anthropology, BSc in Social Anthropology, Erasmus Reciprocal Programme of Study and Exchange Programme for Students from University of California, Berkeley. This course is not available as an outside option to students on other programmes. This course is available with permission to General Course students.
Requisites
Mutually exclusive courses:
This course cannot be taken with AN303 at any time on the same degree programme.
Additional requisites:
Students should have a substantial background in Social Anthropology.
Course content
The aim of this course is to train students to engage critically with classic and contemporary texts in the discipline, thereby deepening understandings of current trends and emerging debates. It will examine the theoretical implications of particular anthropological approaches by surveying their origins, their strengths and their critique. The course will take the form of lectures and classes conducted as an intensive reading group in which approximately three texts will be discussed and analysed in depth, along with supplementary reading material where appropriate. Students will be expected to develop their own critical responses to each text, as well as an appreciation of the context in which it was written and its contribution to relevant theoretical discussions and debates. Students taking this course will develop their capacity to meet the distinctive demands of reading and analysing longer (typically book-length) texts. This course offers a step towards graduate-level skills of independent work, and places emphasis on the active role of the students in identifying their own lines of analysis in relation to a set text.
Teaching
10 hours of lectures and 20 hours of classes in the Autumn Term.
This course has a reading week in Week 6 of Autumn Term.
Lectures provide a general introduction to the text and relevant issues or debates, which may include background and contextual issues, comparative materials (published, visual, primary text etc as appropriate) and in some instances debates about what is at stake in the different ways in which we learn to think and write.
The contact hours listed above are the minimum expected.
Formative assessment
Essay (1200 words)
Students will have the opportunity to submit up to three position pieces during the course. Only the two position pieces with the highest marks will count towards the student’s final grade for the course. If a student submits all three position pieces, the position piece with the lowest mark will be treated as formative work. Students are not required to submit all three position pieces but are encouraged to do so to allow one position piece to count as formative coursework.
Indicative reading
- Gillian Feeley-Harnik. Selection of articles, including chapters in S.Mckinnon and F. Cannell eds. (2013) Vital Relations and in S. Franklin and S.Mckinnon eds. (2001) Relative Values.
- Deirdre de la Cruz. Mother figured: Marian apparitions and the making of a Filipino universal.
- Emily Martin Bipolar expeditions
Assessment
Portfolio (100%, 2400 words)
All students will produce a portfolio of position pieces (worth 100% of the total mark), to which they are expected to make a contribution after each of the three cycles. Each position piece should up to 1200 words in length.
Portfolios will be assessed periodically during and after AT.
Students who submit fewer than two position pieces will receive a mark of zero for each missed assessment. The overall mark will be the average of the two position pieces with the highest grades, including any zeros for missed assessments. If a student submits all three position pieces, the position piece with the lowest mark will be treated as formative work and will not contribute to the final mark.
Students who submit at least one position piece and fail the course and are not eligible to graduate will be expected to add to their portfolio at resit in order to achieve a pass. Students who do not submit any position pieces (0 out of 3), will be awarded a Zero Absent for the whole course and cannot be awarded the degree until they submit sufficient work at resit to complete the course.
Key facts
Department: Anthropology
Course Study Period: Autumn Term
Unit value: Half unit
FHEQ Level: Level 5
CEFR Level: Null
Total students 2024/25: Unavailable
Average class size 2024/25: Unavailable
Capped 2024/25: NoCourse selection videos
Some departments have produced short videos to introduce their courses. Please refer to the course selection videos index page for further information.
Personal development skills
- Leadership
- Self-management
- Application of information skills
- Communication
- Specialist skills