Anthropology Courses and Requirements

 

Requirements

Requirements for a Major

The City College of New York offers a Bachelors of Arts in Anthropology, with basic and advanced courses, along with independent studies and courses on selected topics.

REQUIRED COURSES (15 credits)
ANTH 20000: Archaeology (3 credits)
ANTH 20100: Cross-Cultural Perspectives (3 credits)
ANTH 20200: Languages and Dialects in Cross-Cultural Perspectives (3 credits)
ANTH 20300: Human Origins (3 credits)
One 30000-level course (3 credits)
Appropriate electives in the respective sub-disciplines may be substituted for Anthropology 20000, 20100 or 20300 with departmental approval.


ELECTIVE COURSES (15 credits)
As many as 6 of the 15 elective credits may be related courses outside the Department of Anthropology, e.g., courses in Asian Studies, Biology, Black Studies, History or Sociology. These courses must be chosen in consultation with a departmental advisor.

Total Credits: 30

Requirements for a Minor

REQUIRED COURSES (15 credits)
All 15 credits must be courses within the Anthropology department. Consult with the Chair or Faculty Advisor.

Total Credits: 15

Requirements for a Medical Anthropology Concentration

Consult with the Chair or Faculty Advisor.

Courses

Following is a comprehensive list of courses offered by the Department of Anthropology. For a listing of the courses offered this semester, please check the current course schedule.
The general prerequisite for elective courses is either Anthropology 10100 or sophomore standing, or permission of the instructor. Other prerequisites may be listed under certain courses.

Core Courses

ANTH 10100    Introduction to Anthropology
This class provides a general overview of the field of anthropology. As it is a four sub-field discipline providing a holistic understanding of human life, the class will delve into each sub-field. Students are expected to leave with a fuller appreciation of Anthropology and with knowledge of linguistic anthropology, biological anthropology, archaeology, and socio-cultural anthropology. Through such an approach, students will have a deeper and more expansive understanding of human history and contemporary matters. One of the goals of this class is to better our grasp of anthropology and thus give us a socio-scientific toolkit to interpret our social worlds and thus prepare students for advanced classes in the major and in other social science fields.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

ANTH 10101    General Anthropology - Honors
Humankind from its prehistoric beginnings in Africa and its evolution to the present; human nature; cultural bias and fallacies of cultural and racial superiority; society, social groups (ethnic, racial, class, etc.) and social stratification; cultural change and diffusion; the cultural vs. the individual and biological; the interaction among biology, environment, and culture; conflict, culture change and "modernization"; and ritual, symbol, beliefs, values, customs, and language. Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

Introductory Courses

20000    Archaeology: The Past in the Present
Introduces students to archaeological method and thought through an examination of world prehistory from hominid evolution to the development of complex societies. Critical examinations of global heritage and colonialism sheds light on the politics of archaeology and the significance of the past in the present.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

20100    Cross-Cultural Perspectives
This class provides a general overview of the field of socio-cultural anthropology. As this class is an excursion into the field of socio-cultural anthropology, our main goal will be to understand, complicate, and theorize “culture.” Students are expected to leave with a fuller understanding of socio-cultural anthropology, ethnographic method, and the complexities of cultural life. The main questions in this class will be: What is culture? How do cultural practices vary across social contexts? How can culture be multiple and contradictory? What does ethnographic method look like to study culture? Students will leave this class with a greater grasp of the “culture” concept and ethnographic methodologies.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

20200    Languages in Cross-Cultural Perspective
This course introduces students to the study of language from an anthropological perspective. Topics include the structure of language and its relationship to other kinds of communication; language use in face-to-face interactions; the relationship of language to class, race, ethnicity, gender, and other forms of social difference; and the role of language in mass-media.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

20300    Human Origins
An introduction to biological anthropology, this course will explore the biological and cultural elements of what makes us human. The fossil record of our hominid ancestors and the behavior of our primate relatives will lead to considerations of human variation and issues of social consequence like race, genetics, and inequality.    Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

21002    Writing for the Social Sciences
To develop the skills necessary for writing in the social sciences through the methods and techniques used in Anthropology. The focus of the course is on ethnography (a primarily descriptive account of a single cultural scene). Students will explore the steps used to create an ethnography, including reviewing previous research, formulating hypotheses based on this review, gathering data through fieldwork, and writing a research paper on the results.    Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk
 

Archaeology

20500    Topics in Historical Archaeology
The archaeological study of the modern period, from Columbus’ first colonial contact in the Americas to the present day. This rotating thematic course will focus on essential topics of historical archaeological inquiry including colonialism, slavery, the African Diaspora, gender, social inequality, Indigenous archaeology, heritage, and archaeologies of the contemporary.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

20501    Historical Archaeology Field School
Basic field methodologies including research design, survey, excavation, and laboratory methods. While special accommodations can be made, the course requires physical activity and the ability to undertake manual labor at active archaeological sites. Location of course determined in consultation with instructor.    
Credits: 3-6
Hours: 3-6 hr./wk

21500    The Origins of the State
The advent of urban centers and complex societies from the origins of agriculture. State societies will be explored from the Mediterranean to the Americas to address social life, political organization, economics, inequality, and everyday life in the earliest state societies as seen through the written and archaeological record.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

33100    History of Anthropological Theory
History of the field of Anthropology. Nineteenth century evolutionary theories, and early 20th century historical particularism and structural functionalism. The personality and culture school. Colonialism and politics of anthropological theory.    
Pre Req: ANTH 20100 and at least two electives in Anthropology, or instructor's permission

Sociocultural Anthropology

22500    Class, Ethnicity and Gender
Interrelationship of social organization with economical, political, and religious structures in selected societies chosen to represent various levels of integration in different parts of the world. Modern issues facing increasingly heterogeneous urban societies.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

22800    Anthropology of Urban Areas
Anthropological perspectives on the understanding of the urban experience. Urbanization and urbanism from an international perspective. The forces that shape people's lives in the metropolis. Topics will include the role of ethnicity, race, class, poverty and culture in urban life. Emphasis on urban institutions, ethnicity, race and class in New York City.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

22804    Urban Anthropology
Anthropological perspectives on the understanding of the urban experience. Urbanization and urbanism from an international perspective. The forces that shape people's lives in the metropolis. Topics will include the role of institutions, landscapes, ethnicity, race, class, poverty, gender, and culture in urban life with an emphasis on New York City. This course is offered as a HYBRID and students must be prepared to use online resources and participate in weekly online discussions.    
Credits: 4
Hours: 4 hr./wk
Pre Req: IAS 10300 or IAS 10400 or equivalent.

22900    Cultural Change and Modernization
The impact of Western colonial systems on the politics and cultures of the Third World. The growth of new nations and national institutions in Africa, Asia and Latin America.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

23100    Anthropology of Law
The comparison of legal institutions and practices and of cultural concepts of danger and crime, conformity and conflict, and dispute management and settlement in non-Western societies and in the urban United States. Topics include law and social change; ordeals and verbal dueling; the relationship of legal practices to class, status and power with emphasis on the position of marginal groups and individuals; American family law; and American Indian law.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

23200    Witchcraft, Magic and Religion
The relationship between social behavior and ideas about supernatural forces. Topics include the origin and role of religion in society; comparison of types of supernatural beings, powers, and religious practitioners; the practice of witchcraft and magic in different societies and ethnic groups; the interpretation of ritual symbols and mythology.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

23600    Anthropology of Gender and Sexuality
This course explores how gender and sexuality are iterated, performed, challenged, and managed. Instead of seeing gender and sexuality as coherent and easily quantifiable categories, this class delves into the many contradictions in the categories of gender and sexuality in order to unpack everyday taken for granted assumptions. Furthermore, students will examine how these categories intersect, how they inform each other, and how they gain traction with race, class, and ethnicity.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

24000-24700    Special Area Studies
A group of courses devoted to the study of the cultures and societies of major world areas. Economic patterns, social structures, political organization and religious life. Relation of traditional cultures to contemporary politics.     

24000    Peoples of Africa
Traditional and modern African cultures viewed on their own terms; African roots of all humanity; the nature of pre-colonial societies; legacy of slavery and colonialism. Special topics include apartheid, African arts and music, African descendants in the Americas, alternate healing systems, and communal religion and trance.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk 

24200    Peoples of the Caribbean
This course examines the cultural formation of the Caribbean and the diversity of contemporary Caribbean societies. Both the colonial and post-colonial experience of the Afro-Caribbean and the Hispanic Caribbean will be explored. Among the topics to be discussed will be family, religion, rural and urban life, race, color and class, and international migration.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

24300    Peoples of Latin America
This course offers a comparative perspective on contemporary Latin American societies and cultures and places those societies and cultures in historical perspective. Topics include the politics of indigeneity, race, and ethnicity; social movements and human rights; economic and environmental inequality; post-conflict and post-dictatorship political dynamics; and migration and the Diaspora.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

24600    Peoples of the Middle East
This course explores Middle Eastern societies through an anthropological lens. It begins with a review of this area’s main sub-regions, social traditions and changing cultural institutions. The effect of colonization, independence movements and ongoing political-economic struggles on selected societies will be covered. Finally, the course will examine Middle Eastern culture, development and migration through various contemporary crises.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

24800    Field Work Methods in Cultural Anthropology
First hand experience with cultural diversity in New York City, with emphasis on direct observation in various neighborhoods and institutional settings. Problems of gathering and analyzing qualitative and quantitative data, framing research questions, and the ethics of research in culturally unfamiliar settings.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

24900    Visual Anthropology
Selected world cultures and societies as viewed through the camera lens. Comparisons are drawn between visual andprinted records, different styles of filmmaking, and changing cultural patterns. The evolution of anthropology as a discipline. Selected film topics include patterns of work, ritual, the construction of gender roles, and child socialization.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

32300    Islamic Cultures and Issues
An introduction to basic beliefs, the socio-historical backgrounds of Islamic peoples, current geo-cultural spread, practices/acts of worship, and values and morals. The course examines Islam comparatively: traditional festivals and observances, family and community life, as well as customs and relationships with other communities. Also covered are Islamic contributions, issues, migrations and organizations, and frequent media stereotyping and misrepresentations.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

32400    Violation of Human Rights
A review of the development of human rights accords and legislation, followed by an examination of international institutions overseeing and enforcing human rights standards. Special attention will be given to media and institutional responses to human rights issues, such as those tied to international, regional, and class injustices, with an emphasis on situations involving women and social minorities/oppressed groups.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

32500    Anthropology of War & Trauma
This course pursues an anthropological study of violence, specifically of war, aftermaths and the sequaelae of trauma. Theoretical and ethnographic work will address people’s experiences of a continuum of violence. Key thinkers, critical case studies, ethnographies, and topics such as women and war, insurgency, and ethical research will be examined.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

32600    Anthropology of Disability: From Memoir to Ethnography
This course introduces students to the anthropology of disability. It explores cross-cultural and sociopolitical questions around the body, impairment, ability, and how disability is key to theorizing difference, inclusion and the making of a broader humanity across cultural contexts. Texts include memoirs, ethnographies, and theories of disability.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

35000    Race and Racism
An examination of the idea of race from biological, sociocultural, and historical standpoints, particularly as it arose in support of the development of western European colonialism and imperialism. Also investigated will be the role of race/racism via-a-vis socioeconomic inequality, gender, class, ethnicity, and sexuality.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

35100    Anthropological Genomics
The goal of the course is to explore how genes can inform us about human history, ancestry and evolution while allowing students the option to participate by collecting genetic data from their own genome. Understanding how genetic data can be combined with independent information to become a powerful and fascinating tool for uncovering events in human history, reconstructing human ancestry, and understanding human evolution will be the focus of the course. The genetic data collected from students who volunteer (the normal fee will be waived) will also personalize the concepts in genetics, human history, anthropology, ethics, bioinformatics, quantitative reasoning and information literacy. Typically, there are two exams and weekly hands-on in class assignments.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

25400    American Cultural Patterns
Anthropological perspectives on contemporary United States culture: ethnic and class variations; effect of mass communication on cultural expression; impact of business and commercial enterprise on the development of culture. Critiques of American culture from national and foreign sources.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

25500    Anthropology of Health and Healing
This course explores the relationship between illness, suffering and healing across a range of medical systems, including biomedicine. Cultural practices and belief systems are analyzed with specific attention to the ways in which political and economic power shape illness and suffering around the world. Students are introduced to key concepts in medical anthropology and address challenging material on health, illness and the body cross-culturally.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

25700    Anthropology of Childhood
This course introduces the interdisciplinary field of childhood studies through an anthropological lens. The category of “childhood” is analyzed through ethnographic studies that reveal the diversity of experiences, relationships, and values that surround childhood (infancy to adolescence) in different cultural contexts. Children as social and political actors are foregrounded.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

27200    Anthropology of Popular Culture
This class explores the ways in which communities use popular culture as a means of identification. Instead of looking solely at the politics of reception, this course aims to show the multiple process of production, reception, and appropriation of popular cultural forms. Instead of dismissing popular cultural as trivial, students will critically evaluate local popular cultural products.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

33000    Contemporary Culture Theory
The theories underlying the analysis of archaeological and cultural data and differing explanations for cultural regularities: evolutionary, ecological, symbolic, Marxist, structuralist, political, and ethical issues and anthropological theory. Prereq.: Anth. 20100 and two additional elective courses in Anthropology or instructor's permission.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

33100    History of Anthropological Theory
History of the field of Anthropology. Nineteenth century evolutionary theories, and early 20th century historical particularism and structural functionalism. The personality and culture school. Colonialism and politics of anthropological theory. Prereq.: 20100 and at least two electives in Anthropology, or instructor's permission.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

35000    Race and Racism
An examination of the idea of race from biological, sociocultural, and historical standpoints, particularly as it arose in support of the development of western European colonialism and imperialism. Also investigated will be the role of race/racism via-a-vis socioeconomic inequality, gender, class, ethnicity, and sexuality.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk
 

Anthropological Linguistics

26500    Language and Power
This class examines the politics of language--how people use language as a political tool and how language can become the object of political struggle. Politicians, activists, citizens, journalists, diplomats, pundits, and celebrities all use language to pursue political goals. We will explore these uses as well as the ways that language can itself become the topic of political concern, as in debates over what counts as hate speech or in struggles for the recognition of certain dialects as legitimate.    
Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

27300    Black English: Structure and Use
The grammatical structure of Black American English and how it is used in Black culture and the educational system.    Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk

27500    Creole Sociolinguistics
The origin, history, and grammar of Haitian (French Creole) and related languages such as St. Lucian, Jamaican (Patois), and Guyanese. Topics include the use of Creole in education, Creole orthography, and the relationship of Creole languages to their European language lexifiers.    Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk
PLUS CONF.; 3 CR
 

Physical Anthropology

29500    Bio-Cultural Anthropology
Interactions between humans and their environment in the past and present. Topics include climate change, the Anthropocene, health disparities and inequality, food politics, gender roles, population studies, and human ecology. A bio-cultural approaches to our world will be foregrounded to explore the complex relationship between nature and culture.    Credits: 3
Hours: 3 hr./wk
 

Anthropological Research Laboratory

13300-13600: Anthropological Research Laboratory
The Anthropological Research Laboratory offers students an opportunity to do independent research in any of the four fields of anthropology or in applied anthropology, and to have individual advisement in the collection, analysis, and summarizing of data. A project is chosen in cooperation with a faculty member with whom the student meets in one hour conferences each week. In addition the student is expected to devote three hours a week for each credit taken, to be spent in reading and/or data collection, analysis, and writing a report. One or 2 credits of ARL can be taken in conjunction with an Anthropology course in which a student is enrolled, enabling the student to do extra work on a project or term paper connected with that course.
Pre Req: any other Anthropology or related course.

(Note: No more than six credits in any one department and no more than nine credits total will be permitted in the following courses: Anthropology 13300-13600, Asian Studies 20402, Black Studies 20000-20400, Psychology 23300-23600, Sociology 23300- 23600)

For detailed information contact the Department of Anthropology (NAC 7/112). 1-3 CR. WITH A MAXIMUM OF 6 CR. ALLOWED FOR THE SERIES.
 

Honors

30100-30400: Honors I-IV
Approval of Dean and department Honors Supervisor required. Apply in NAC 4/144 no later than December 10 in the Fall term or May 1 in the Spring term. VARIABLE CR.,

Credits: 3/SEM
 

Independent Study

31000: Independent Study
An opportunity for an individual or small group to develop a research project or explore some topic in depth through directed readings with a faculty member chosen by the student(s). Research project: a problem will be developed (over several semesters, if necessary) leading to the completion of a research paper based on either library or field data. Tutorial: content of readings will be determined by all the participants, and weekly sessions will provide tutorial style discussion. Students are required to make arrangements for each course well in advance of the registration period.

Pre Req- junior or senior standing and permission of instructor. 2-3 CR.

(EACH COURSE WITH A MAXIMUM OF 6 CREDITS TO BE DETERMINED BEFORE REGISTRATION BY THE INSTRUCTOR WITH THE APPROVAL OF THE DEPARTMENT CHAIR)
 

Selected Topics

31100-32000: Selected Topics
Departmental and interdepartmental cooperative courses of advanced study in selected subjects. Prereq.: junior or senior standing, and permission of the department.

PCredits and Hours: FLEXIBLE BUT USUALLY 3CR and 3HRs
Pre Req: junior or senior standing, and permission of the department

(EACH COURSE WITH A MAXIMUM OF 6 CREDITS TO BE DETERMINED BEFORE REGISTRATION BY THE INSTRUCTOR WITH THE APPROVAL OF THE DEPARTMENT CHAIR.)
 

Last Updated: 01/03/2023 10:49