1001:2020:start
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1001:2020:start [2020/02/05 22:35] – [ANTH 1001: Introduction to anthropology] 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!** | + | **Welcome to anthropology!** |
- | This class is one of two introductory units in anthropology | + | {{page> |
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+ | ## What is anthropology? | ||
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+ | Anthropology is unlike any other social science. It is part science, | ||
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+ | 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 nature. If that's true, then they also affect people in different cultures, each of whom sees the world and other people in a distinct way. Therefore, you cannot understand contemporary trends from a single culture' | ||
## ANTH 1001 is all new this year | ## ANTH 1001 is all new this year | ||
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For Semester 1, 2020, the University of Sydney anthropology department has created a new format for this class, based on the successful model of // | For Semester 1, 2020, the University of Sydney anthropology department has created a new format for this class, based on the successful model of // | ||
+ | ## Ryan's tutorials | ||
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+ | [[1001: | ||
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+ | ## Reference | ||
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+ | Snow, C. P. The Two Cultures. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012 (1959). | ||
- | {{page> |
1001/2020/start.1580970937.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/02/05 22:35 by Ryan Schram (admin)