| Call Number | 10099 | 
|---|---|
| Day & Time Location | MW 11:40am-12:55pm 633 Seeley W. Mudd Building | 
| Points | 3 | 
| Grading Mode | Standard | 
| Approvals Required | None | 
| Instructor | John Pemberton | 
| Type | LECTURE | 
| Method of Instruction | In-Person | 
| Course Description | This course presents students with crucial theories of society, paying particular attention at the outset to classic social theory of the early 20th century. It traces a trajectory of writings essential for an understanding of the social: from Saussure, Durkheim, Mauss, Weber, and Marx, on to the structuralist ethnographic elaboration of Claude Levi-Strauss and the historiographic reflections on modernity of Michel Foucault. We revisit periodically, reflections by Franz Boas, founder of anthropology in the United States (and of Anthropology at Columbia), for a sense of origins, an early anthropological critique of racism and cultural chauvinism, and a prescient denunciation of fascism. We turn as well, also with ever-renewed interest in these times, to the expansive critical thought of W. E. B. Du Bois. We conclude with Kathleen Stewart’s A Space on the Side of the Road--an ethnography of late-twentieth-century Appalachia and the haunted remains of coal-mining country--with its depictions of an uncanny otherness within dominant American narratives. | 
| Web Site | Vergil | 
| Department | Anthropology | 
| Enrollment | 44 students (60 max) as of 7:06PM Thursday, October 30, 2025 | 
| Subject | Anthropology | 
| Number | UN2004 | 
| Section | 001 | 
| Division | Interschool | 
| Section key | 20233ANTH2004V001 |