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1001:2020:start [2020/02/04 22:04] – [ANTH 1001 is all new this year] Ryan Schram (admin)1001:2020:start [2020/03/02 16:20] (current) – [Ryan's tutorials] Ryan Schram (admin)
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 # ANTH 1001: Introduction to anthropology # ANTH 1001: Introduction to anthropology
  
-**Welcome to anthropology!** Anthropologists want to know what makes us human. ANTH 1001 introduces you to the unique perspective on human experience in cultural anthropology. Anthropologists argue that each individual is incomplete without the input of the shared patterns acquired from one's communityIn this class you will learn how anthropologists define the concept of culturehow they use cultural relativism, and how they conduct research through cultural immersion and participatory fieldwork. You will examine several cases that demonstrate the human capacity for cultural diversity, and will understand several of the core topics that anthropologists investigate to capture a society's worldview and way of life.+**Welcome to anthropology!** This is a special supplementary site for //[[1001:2020:start|ANTH 1001: Introduction to anthropology]]//ANTH 1001 is one of two introductory units in anthropology at the University of SydneyThis section of the //Anthrocyclopaedia// is provided as a supplement to the university sites and online resources for this class. On the pages here, you will find a guide to the class and lecture outlines from Ryan's lectures. All of your writing assignmentsother assignments, and the quizzes for lecture are submitted using the class [[http://canvas.sydney.edu.au|Canvas]] site. Here is an overview of the class: 
  
-This class is one of two introductory units in anthropology at the University of SydneyOn the pages in this section of the Anthrocyclopaedia you will find a guide to the class and lecture outlines from Ryan'lecturesAll of your writing assignments, other assignments, and the quizzes for lecture are submitted using the class [[http://canvas.sydney.edu.au|Canvas]] site. This is meant as supplement to the university sites and online resources for this class+{{page>1001guide}} 
 + 
 +## What is anthropology?  
 + 
 +Anthropology is unlike any other social scienceIt is part science, and part art. Anthropologists wish to observe human beings and their social patterns, but we also want to step into the shoes of another person and see the world from that person'point of viewIn this way, anthropology straddles what Snow (2017 [1959]) calls the "two cultures"---science and the humanities---of scholarship. We seek to understand people's ways of lifetheir actions and behaviors in the real world by collecting first-hand, empirical information about what people do every day. Yet we also argue that to understand why people live the ways they do, and why humanity is so wonderfully diverse and why it is always changing in unexpected ways, we have to understand how people think about themselves, their experiences, their relationships, and their larger world, and especially what meaning their life has for them.  
 + 
 +Today, there are many problems and issues which affect all societies and people everywhere. We can say that the most important social problems are global in natureIf that's true, then they also affect people in different cultures, each of whom sees the world and other people in a distinct wayTherefore, you cannot understand contemporary trends from single culture's point of view. The world needs anthropology and anthropologists, namely you.
  
 ## ANTH 1001 is all new this year ## ANTH 1001 is all new this year
  
-For Semester 1, 2020, the University of Sydney anthropology department has created a new format for this class, based on the successful model of //ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world//, which runs in Sem 2. We will work through four three-week modules on different topics that introduce you to the study of culture, cultural difference, and the main perspectives in anthropology as a social science. +For Semester 1, 2020, the University of Sydney anthropology department has created a new format for this class, based on the successful model of //[[1002:start|ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world]]//, which runs in Sem 2. We will work through four three-week modules on different topics that introduce you to the study of culture, cultural difference, and the main perspectives in anthropology as a social science. 
  
 +## Ryan's tutorials
 +
 +[[1001:2020:tutorials:2|Week 2]]
 +
 +## Reference
 +
 +Snow, C. P. The Two Cultures. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012 (1959). 
  
  
  
-{{page>1001guide}} 
1001/2020/start.1580882642.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/02/04 22:04 by Ryan Schram (admin)