Table of Contents
Around the world in 13 weeks
Around the world in 13 weeks
Ryan Schram
October 31, 2018
ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au
Social Sciences Building 410 (A02)
Available at http://anthro.rschram.org/1002/13.2
Global forces and cultural differences
- Capitalism
- Colonialism
- Global religions, e.g. Christianity and Islam
- transcultural discourses of conservation and sustainability
- global warming and its effects on local environments
Capitalism is a culture
- Capitalism is a culture, not a space of “freedom.”
- In a capitalist system, people must play the role of the individual.
- Capitalism creates illusions, e.g. commodity fetishism.
The conjuncture of cultures
- No society exists in isolation; everyone lives in an intersection of two or more systems.
- Contemporary societies are all different, but we can understand them all as variations on the encounter of reciprocity and commodification.
- Efflorescence
- Tension, conflict, segregation
- Transformation
- Global forces are context for local cultural systems, and vice versa.
- This is not just true about global capitalism; we can apply the same perspective to any global movement, even climate change.
- Climate migration
- “Gone the bull of winter”
- The fantasy that indigenous people are wise prophets of sustainability
The snake and the mongoose
Once upon a time there was a snake and a mongoose…
Many opposites - values, ideas, institutions - are not binary, either-or. They are contradictions and they exist in an ambiguous tension which is both a source of conflict but also creativity.
Snake and mongoose
That is, contemporary life is defined by its contradictions. There are co-present forces in tension, leading to conflict and also unexpected side-effects.
- Globalization involves change in societies.
- Globalization allows people to recreate a coherent cultural order with new materials.
Everything is mixed
Categories are not dichotomous; Many opposites are actually co-present.
- Tradition / modernity
- Developed / undeveloped
- Custom / rationality
- Gift / commodity
- Love / money
Each society, big or small, is also a microcosm of the whole world.
Majoring in anthropology
If you started in 2018
A major consists of 48 credit points (eight units) at three levels. The requirements for a major in anthropology are:
- ANTH 1001 and 1002 (ANTH 1001 is also offered in the summer)
- Two 2000-level units (e.g. culture and development, medical anthropology, gender, religion)
- Four 3000-level units (e.g. Indigenous Australians Today, The Social Production of Space)
If you started before 2018
A major consists of 36 “senior” (2000-level and 3000-level units). These should include:
- One senior unit from each of three types: regional (Southeast Asia, Indigenous Australia), thematic (medical anthropology, religion), and theoretical-methodological
- One 3000-level unit, typically either ANTH 3601 (contemporary theories) or ANTH 3602 (reading ethnography)
Honours in anthropology: Independent thinking and research
Doing an honours year in anthropology is an opportunity to carry out an original project, working one on one with a supervisor. To qualify for honours entry, you need:
- a credit average of 70 or better
- across 42 senior credit points of anthropology
- including ANTH3601 and ANTH3602
- (if you began your course in 2018) two majors
- you need to be keen and have an idea for a project! (Discuss with the honours coordinator and potential supervisors!)
Now, for a special message about our world-renowned honours program in anthropology, here's the 2019 honours coordinator, Yasmine Musharbash!
References
Lacock, Hennie. 2013. Cobra and Mongoose. Caters New Agency. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-10/29/132841640_11n.jpg.