Anthropology at Bryn Mawr College
PS#CRS#CRTITLE OF COURSEProfessor(s)/Instructor(s)DIV
1092B101 011.0Introduction to Anthropology
Enrollment limited to 50 students, 25 seats held for entering freshmen. Students must choose 1 Lab hour per week on Mondays 1:00-2:00; 2:00-3:00 or Wednesday 1:00-2:00; 2:00-3:00
Davis/Rhodes
MWF 9:00 AM-10:00 AM
MW 1:00 PM-2:00 PM
MW 2:00 PM-3:00 PM
Lab
Lab
SO I
CARP21
DAL315
DAL315
1093B101 021.0Introduction to Anthropology
Enrollment limited to 50 students, 25 seats held for entering freshmen. Students must choose 1 Lab hour per week on Mondays 1:00-2:00; 2:00-3:00 or Wednesday 1:00-2:00; 2:00-3:00
Rhodes
MWF 10:00 AM-11:00 AM
MW 1:00 PM-2:00 PM
MW 2:00 PM-3:00 PM
Lab
Lab
SO I
CARP21
DAL315
DAL315
1425B185 021.0Urban Culture and Society
Cross-listed with ANTH B185. Enrollment limited to 70 students, 20 seats held for freshmen. Preference to freshmen and sophomores.
Arbona/McDonogh
MW 1:00 PM-2:30 PM
MW 1:00 PM-2:30 PM
SJ I
TAYF
TAYG
1459B200 011.0The Atlantic World
Indians, Europeans & Africans
Counts toward Peace and Conflict Studies Concentration and towards the Hispanic American Studies Concentration. Enrollment limited to 30 students. Cross listed with HIST B200.
Gallup-Diaz
MW 11:30 AM-1:00 PM
Indians, Europeans & Africans
SO I or III
DAL119
1094B203 011.0Human Ecology
Enrollment limited to 20 students.
Davis
MWF 12:00 PM-1:00 PM
SO I
TAYF
1095B232 011.0Nutritional Anthropology
Enrollment limited to 25 students. Prerequisite: either ANTH 101 or 102 or permission.
Rhodes
F 1:00 PM-3:00 PM
SO I
DAL119
1940B235 011.0Transitional Justice
New Course: Explores the future of transitional justice, where post-conflict societies use institutions to address the legacy of violence to build sustainable peace. Case studies of countries which have used a variety of approaches will help us consider concepts like human rights, justice, reconciliation and peace, and how these principles might be achieved through initiatives such as UN-directed tribunals, national courts, truth commissions and/or locally-based systems deriving from ritual or customary law. Prerequisite: One course in ANTH, POLS or Peace and Conflict Studies. Enrollment limited to 25 students, with preference to junior and senior concentrators and majors, then by lottery, if needed. Cross listed with POLS B235. Counts toward Peace and Conflict Studies Concentration.

MW 10:00 AM-11:30 AM
Doughty teaching
SO I
DAL25
1446B236 011.0Evolution
Cross listed with BIOL B236 and GEOL B236. Enrollment limited to 42 students.
Saunders/Gardiner
TTH 10:00 AM-11:30 AM
NA II
PK25
1947B247 011.0Gender, Nation, Diaspora
This course examines the relationship of gender to both the nation and the diaspora, within a context of globalization. We will study the co-constitutive relationship of gender, sexuality, race/ethnicity, and class in national and transnational contexts. Although focused primarily on Filipino American/Philippine cultural production, we examine multiple geopolitical sites. Counts toward the Gender and Sexuality Studies Concentration.
Velasco
TTH 1:00 PM-2:30 PM
SO I
DAL2
1472B249 011.0Asian American Communities
Cross listed with SOCL B249 and CITY B249. Enrollment limited to 25 students. Preference given to Sociology majors and minors; ANTH and Cities majors and minors.
Takenaka
MW 2:30 PM-4:00 PM
SO I
DAL119
1471B258 011.0Immigrant Experiences
Prerequisite: One social science course required or permission of instructor. Counts towards the Hispanic American Studies Concentration. Enrollment limited to 25 students. Preference given to Sociology majors and minors; ANTH majors and minors; cross listed with SOCL B246.
Takenaka
MW 11:30 AM-1:00 PM
SO I
DAL2
1097B281 011.0Language in Social Context
Enrollment limited to 20 students. Cross listed with LING B281.
Weidman
W 1:00 PM-3:30 PM
SO I
TAYE
1098B303 011.0History Anthropological Theory
Limited to 25 students
Kilbride
TH 1:00 PM-4:00 PM
SO I
DAL119
1508B312 011.0Anthropology of Reproduction
Enrollment limited to 15 students, selected first by major and then by fulfillment of the course pre-requisite.
Pashigian
T 1:00 PM-3:30 PM
SO I
DAL1
1427B359 011.0Topics Urban Culture/Society
Latin American Social Movements
Introduces Soclal Justice issues as they pertain to the socio-economic processes that shape cities. Course readings encompass discussions about the "urbanization of justice", debates about citizenship and democracy, direct democracy/action. Case studies from Latin America and the US provide context to these debates. Enrollment limited to 20 students, with preference to advanced majors in Cities and Anthropology. Cross listed with CITY B360 and HART B359
Arbona
TH 2:00 PM-4:00 PM
Latin American Social Movements
discussion sessions
SO I or III
TH224
1448B397 011.0Sr Seminar Environment Studies
Open only to senior Environmental Studies Concentrators. Cross listed with GEOL B397, CITY B397 and BIOL B397.
Stroud/Oze
W 1:00 PM-4:00 PM
NA
PK259
1099B398 021.0Senior ConferenceKilbride/Pashigian/Weidman
M 2:00 PM-4:00 PM
SO I
DAL212A
1509B403 011.0Supervised WorkSO
Anthropology at Haverford College
H103A011.0Introduction to Anthropology
Not open to students who have completed BMC Anth 102.
Fulfills Social Justice
Enrollment limited to 40 students.
Lottery preference: 20 slots for Class of '12; 20 for others
Z.Ngwane
TTh 10:00-11:30

SO I
Stokes Aud
 
 
H103A021.0Introduction to Anthropology
Not open to students who have completed BMC Anth 102.
Fulfills Social Justice
Enrollment limited to 40 students.
Lottery preference:20 slots for Class of '12; 20 all others.
Z.Ngwane
TTh 11:30-1:00

SO I
Chase 104
 
 
H207A011.0Visual Anthropology
Anth 103 at Haverford or 102 at Bryn Mawr.
Enrollment limited to 15 students.
Students will not be admitted to course without prerequisite
M.Gillette/J.Shipley
MW 2:30-4:00

SO I
Hall 201
 
 
H218A011.0Culture in the Global Economy
ANTH 102 or 103, or consent.
B.Uygun
TTh 1:00-2:30

SO I
Hall 112
 
 
H263A011.0Anthropology of Space and Architecture
One course in ANTH or CITY.

May be taken for BMC Cities credit.
L.Hart
TTh 11:30-1:00

SO I
Hlls 108
 
 
H322A011.0Ethnographic Methods
ANTH 102 or 103. Preference to ANTH majors/minors and PEAC concentrators.
Enrollment limited to 15 students.
M.Gillette
T 1:30-4:00

SO I
Link 309
 
 
H327A011.0Ritual, Performance and Symbolic Practice
One course in Anthropology or consent.

NEW COURSE.This course examines theories of performance and practice as a way for understanding how specific events and actions relate to social structure, history, and memory. We will explore how bodies become produced and contested in the performance of political and personal productive and sensuous activity. The course's central thematic explores the tension between theories of performance and theories of practice which highlight key philosophical issues within anthropology and social thought more generally: power and its enactment, the relationship between personal experience and macro-sociological processes, the nature of consciousness, structure versus agency, and stasis versus change.
J.Shipley
T 7:30pm-10:00pm

SO I
Gest 102
 
 
H350A011.0Social and Cultural Theory: Contemporary Ethnography
L.Hart
Th 1:30-4:00

SO I
Gest 103
 
 
H361A011.0Culture and Society in Modern Turkey
One course in an appropriate ethnographic area or consent.

TOPIC: This course will examine the cultural politics of modern Turkey. The course will explore the complexities of 21st C Turkey by focusing on several key themes related to these changes: the role of the state and Kemalism (the official ideology), secularism & islam, ethnicity, gender & sexuality, the rise of consumerism, popular culture, and globalization. We will also interrogate the role and usefulness of the widely used metaphor of Turkey as a bridge between East and West, using this line of inquiry to reflect more broadly on the concept of culture.
B.Uygun
F 1:30-4:00

SO I
Gest 103
 
 
H450A011.0Senior Seminar: Research and Writing
Senior standing in ANTH at Haverford
M.Gillette
M 7:30-10:00pm

SO
Gest 101
 
 
H460A011.0Teaching Assistant
Z.Ngwane
HTBA

SO
TBA
 
 
H480A021.0Independent Study
Z.Ngwane


SO I