Fulltext results:
- research-exercise
- scholarly publication by an anthropologist on the topic of gifts, exchange, economic organization, or a related topic. Make a claim about the author’s relationship to ... and use it to develop your own understanding of a topic. The ideas in scholarly publications are not mere... to find out more about what people think about a topic: Do a bibliography crawl. Check the list of refer
- what-we-will-do
- the things that anthropologists talk about. Each topic complements the others, and together they help us... ay lives. The semester is divided into four main topics, each presented in a three-week sequence called ... lturalism Anthropologists approach each of these topics by placing it in a comparative, cross-cultural f... to rethink how their societies have defined this topic and how it might be defined differently. * In th
- cultural-critique
- ence of a cultural ideology. Consider all of the topics we have discussed in this class: pregnancy, chil... ry source. You are not required to research your topic by finding scholarly sources (or secondary sources) on your topic. Your argument will be stronger if you explain yo... **, that is, does each focus on one main point or topic? * Is the **order of topics** clear to a reader
- how-to-zoom
- he lecturer might extemporaneously reflect on the topic of the week and students’ questions, and expand o... s respectful language and how to handle sensitive topics.** Plus, Zoom provides a really great medium for
- attendance
- or multimedia presentations, each on a single key topic or example relevant to the week, in the checklist
- birth-interview
- details about students. We understand that this topic can tread into territory that you or others want
- types-of-pubs
- . While the chapters all address the same general topic, theme, or problem, they are meant to be self-con
- welcome
- ll be available every week to discuss each week’s topics and the class as whole. To begin, move on to Mo