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SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT
Division of Social Sciences Associate Professor Melissa A. Johnson, PhD,
Chair Professor Edward L. Kain, PhD Professor Maria R. Lowe,
PhD Assistant Professor Sandi Kawecka Nenga, PhD Visiting Assistant
Professor Claudia Campeanu, PhD Visiting Instructor Chauntelle Tibbals,
MA Professor Emeritus Dan C. Hilliard, PhD (part-time) At the heart of
Sociology and Anthropology lies an interest in understanding the ways in which
group membership, cultural context and social hierarchies affect people’s
lived experiences and world views. Combining sociology’s focus on
contemporary and historical patterns of social interaction with
anthropology’s interests in systems of shared and contested cultural
meanings, the department’s offerings encourage awareness and understanding
of human diversity and cultural variation locally and globally. We are
especially interested in examining the ways in which race, class, gender and
other social attributes operate within systems of domination and resistance.
Coursework within our department will challenge students to examine some of
their most basic assumptions about the world and will contribute to a critical
understanding of how the social world operates—an essential characteristic
of a liberally educated global citizen. As a progressive department, we
encourage in our students a commitment to social justice based on an
appreciation of social and cultural diversity and an awareness of social
inequality. Faculty members’ teaching and research embrace this commitment
in a variety of ways, and we encourage students to use the knowledge, skills and
perspectives they have gained through courses and other work with us to promote
positive social change. Graduates of the Sociology and Anthropology Department
are well prepared to enter leading graduate programs in Anthropology, Sociology,
Law, Social Work, Public Health, International Development, Latin American
Studies and Public Policy. Recent graduates have found work in community
development, public health, marketing and a variety of non-profit organizations.
Others have joined the Peace Corps, Americorps, Vista and similar kinds of
programs. Our graduates live and work throughout the United States and
world. The department seeks to emphasize how the two disciplines of Sociology
and Anthropology complement each other. The department offers majors in both
Sociology and Anthropology and a paired major in Sociology and Anthropology, as
well as minors in both fields. The paired major is attained by double counting
Anthropology 35-103 and Sociology 34-113 or 123.
Sociology
Although it is a diverse field, sociology is united in (1) its acknowledgment
that race, gender and class deeply affect our perceptions and lived experiences,
(2) its focus on inter-group comparisons and (3) recognition of the sociological
imagination as the foundation of the discipline. The sociology major is designed
to help students critically examine the mutual link between our daily
experiences and larger social structures. Though we specialize in social
patterns and processes in the United States, we connect these issues to larger
transnational phenomena. Our courses focus on topics germane to our current
global society and issues of race/class/gender across the curriculum. Courses
address the increasing role of the mass media; the significance of sport in
society; issues of personal and public health and health policy; global
population change and policy; family structure and change in settings around the
globe, and how the social and cultural construction of gender shapes these
global patterns and changes; the causes and consequences of grassroots protest
movements; the increase in the unequal distribution of resources within and
across nations; the ways that gender is constructed by a range of interlocking
inequalities; how race and ethnicity are constructed, maintained and challenged
individually, institutionally, and culturally; the ways that social class is
reproduced and maintained in the United States; the stigmatization and social
construction of disability; and children’s peer cultures as a site where
inequalities are both challenged and reaffirmed. Students seeking a major in
Sociology will complete the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree. The
major in Sociology is built around a cumulative curriculum with courses at four
different levels. 100-level courses are introductory, and serve as prerequisites
for most of the courses at the 200-level or above. Courses at the 200-level
include courses required of all sociology majors as well as courses which serve
a broad audience of majors and non-majors. Courses at the 300 and 400-level are
primarily for sociology majors and minors or other students with a particular
interest in the discipline. In general, students should take at least two other
courses in sociology and anthropology before taking 300 or 400-level courses. In
order to ensure that they gain skills in qualitative research, students are
required to take a course which includes a qualitative research component, one
of 34-233, 34-263, 34-313. Courses at the 900-level are designed for senior
sociology majors, but others may enroll in these courses with the permission of
the instructor. Descriptions of the skills built at each level of the curriculum
are found in the handbook on the departmental homepage at
http://www.southwestern.edu/academic/depts/socanthro/HandbookSoc.html. Majors
considering graduate school or careers in Social Work or Public Health are
strongly encouraged to register for an Academic Internship.
Anthropology
The Anthropology major is designed to develop a critical awareness and
understanding of the diversity of peoples and cultures and of the relevance and
application of anthropological perspectives and methods to contemporary issues.
The major provides a well-balanced intellectual and practical background for a
broad range of careers and fields of graduate study, particularly those that
require culturally sensitive approaches or multicultural perspectives.
Geographically, the department specializes in the Caribbean, Latin America and
Latinos in the United States. Topically, courses cover issues central to our
contemporary global society: questions of race, class and gender; power and
violence; cross-cultural constructions of masculinity and femininity;
environmental injustice; global inequality; migration and identity; and advocacy
and activism. Anthropology majors acquire solid grounding in both the social and
cultural theory employed and generated by anthropologists and the ethnographic
methods that define our discipline. A critical component of the Anthropology
major is the period of in-depth ethnographic research as described
below. Students seeking a major in Anthropology complete the requirements for
the Bachelor of Arts degree. Students are strongly encouraged to participate in
study abroad programs and are required to complete a period of in-depth
ethnographic research during which they collect data for their capstone. This
research period must be completed by end of the fall semester of their senior
year and must entail a minimum of four weeks of intensive research or its
equivalent. Students must prepare a proposal for the ethnographic research they
plan to conduct, and must submit the proposal to the anthropology faculty for
approval at least six weeks before beginning their research. The proposal should
state the research question, describe the fieldwork site, provide a rationale
for the methods to be used, and include a bibliography of relevant literature on
the research problem and/or site. Students may conduct their research through a
variety of ways, including the following: field component of approved
intercultural study program, such as School for International Training (SIT),
Minnesota Studies in International Development (MSID), or Higher Education
Consortium for Urban Affairs (HECUA); independent research supervised by
Southwestern Anthropology faculty; or an approved summer field program offered
by another institution. Major in Sociology: 32
semester hours, including Anthropology 35-103; Sociology 34-113 or 123; 34-201/
203 (to be taken in the sophomore or junior year), 213, 964 (Capstone, to be
taken in the fall of the senior year); one from Sociology 34-233, 263, 313; 12
additional hours of Sociology, nine hours of which must be above the
introductory level (eight of these hours may be in
Anthropology). Required supporting course in the
Sociology major: Mathematics 52-113. Additional
requirements for the Sociology major: Successful completion of a senior
oral examination during the last semester of study; completion of the Major
Field Examination in Sociology sometime during the senior
year. Minor in Sociology: 18 semester hours,
including Sociology 34-113 or 123; 15 additional semester hours of Sociology, 12
hours of which must be above the introductory level (four of these hours may be
in Anthropology). Major in Anthropology: 32
semester hours, including Anthropology 35-103, 203 (to be taken in the sophomore
or junior year), 214 (to be taken in the sophomore or junior year), 964
(Capstone, to be taken in the spring of the senior year); Sociology 34-113 or
123; 15 additional hours of Anthropology above the introductory level (eight of
these hours may be in Sociology). Additional
requirements for the Anthropology major: In depth ethnographic research
project to yield data for use in capstone as described above; successful
completion of a senior oral examination during the last semester of
study. Minor in Anthropology: 18 semester
hours, including Anthropology 35-103; 15 additional semester hours of
Anthropology, at least 12 hours of which must be above the introductory level
(four of these hours may be in Sociology).
Sociology (SOC)
| 34-113 | SOCIAL
PATTERNS AND PROCESSES. A basic course in the analysis of social institutions
and communities calling on various perspectives, including models from
functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism. Principles of
modern sociology are taught by application to specific topics ranging from
community to family and gender relations to sport and leisure. (Each semester)
(ScS) | | 34-123 | SOCIAL
PROBLEMS. This course focuses on the “sociological imagination”
understanding how individuals’ lives are shaped by larger social and
historical forces – through an examination of specific social problems
that may include welfare policy, crime and delinquency, racial inequality and
poverty. (Each semester)
(ScS) | | 34-203,
201 | RESEARCH METHODS. Acquaints majors and minors in
sociology with the procedures for gathering and analyzing sociological data.
Students in Research Methods will meet for weekly lab sessions in addition to
the lecture and discussion times. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or 123, and
Mathematics 52-113.
(Fall) | | 34-213 | SOCIOLOGICAL
THEORY. Contributions made to sociological theory beginning in the mid-19th
century to the present. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or 123.
(Spring) | | 34-223 | CONFORMITY,
DEVIANCE AND IDENTITY. A study of the societal definition of deviant behavior,
causes of deviant behavior and social control. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or
123. | | 34-233 | GENDER
AND SEXUALITY. The course examines the historical, social and cultural
construction of gender, focusing on the ways that femininities and masculinities
are constructed from infancy through adulthood in the United States. Also
included is an exploration of the construction of sexualities, and the effects
of constructing some sexualities as “deviant” and others as
“normal.” The class will analyze the patterns and fluctuations in
sexual and gender constructs across racial, ethnic and social class categories.
Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or 123. Also Feminist Studies
04-233. | | 34-243 | FAMILIES
IN SOCIETY. The study of families in historical, social and cultural
perspective, including analysis of variation in family experience by race and
ethnicity, class and gender. Processes of mate selection, marriage patterns, and
the formation of families, households, and kin groups are covered. Prerequisite:
Sociology 34-113 or 123. Also Feminist Studies 04-243.
(Annually) | | 34-253 | SOCIOLOGY
OF SPORT. The study of sport as an institution of modern societies, and
considering its relationship to other major social patterns of those societies,
such as gender, race relations, political and economic structures, higher
education and the mass media. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or 123. Also
Kinesiology
48-353. | | 34-263 | RACE
AND ETHNICITY. This course examines the ways that race and ethnicity have
historically been and currently are constructed, maintained, and challenged
individually, institutionally and culturally. In addition, the class explores
how our American experiences as well as our life chances are shaped and modified
by our ethnic and racial group histories and memberships. Prerequisite:
Sociology 34-113 or 123. Also Feminist Studies
04-523 | | 34-274 | CHILDHOOD
AND YOUTH. The course examines how the historical and social construction of
childhood and adolescence intersect with major social institutions. It
introduces the social organization underlying children’s and
adolescents’ social interactions, agency and peer cultures, and considers
the ways these vary according to gender, race and class. Prerequisite: Sociology
34-113 or 123. Also Feminist Studies 04-294.
(Fall) | | 34-313 | SOCIAL
CLASS IN THE U.S. The study of the construction, maintenance, and consequences
of social inequalities in the United States, based on the review of classical
and contemporary theories, empirical research and biographical accounts.
Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or 123. Also Feminist Studies 04-583.
(Spring) | | 34-333 | MEDICAL
SOCIOLOGY. Applies sociological methods and concepts to the field of illness and
health care in modern societies, dealing with such topics as social
epidemiology, social psychological aspects of illness, and systems of health
care financing and delivery. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-113 or
123. | | 34-343 | ORGANIZATION
THEORY AND DESIGN. Prerequisites: for Business majors-Business 30-323; for
Sociology majors-Sociology 34-113. See Business
30-553. | | 34-352 | DEMOGRAPHY:
WORLD POPULATION GEOGRAPHY. The study of the major demographic processes of
fertility, mortality and migration. Students will examine global demographic
patterns and trends in all world regions, with specific case studies in a number
of countries. This is a half-semester course, offered the first half of the
semester. Also Environmental Studies 49-352.
(ScS) | | 34-412 | URBAN
SOCIOLOGY. An analysis of urban patterns, employing the two theoretical
traditions of urban ecology and political economy. Particular attention is paid
to the emergence of global cities. An understanding of demographic patterns and
processes is assumed. This is a half-semester course, offered the second half of
the semester in conjunction with SOC34-352. Prerequisite: Sociology 34-352 or
another demography course.
(ScS) | | 34-614 | LATIN
AMERICAN POLITICS. See Political Science
32-614. | | 34-764 | ADVANCED
RESEARCH SEMINAR IN LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS. See Political Science
32-764. | | 34-964 | SENIOR
RESEARCH SEMINAR: SELECTED TOPICS IN SOCIOLOGY. The sociology capstone requires
students to develop a major empirical paper that incorporates knowledge they
have learned from their sociology courses to date, particularly sociological
theory and research methods. Students will construct a coherent research
question, collect and analyze data to explore the question, and apply
sociological theories and literature to their findings. They will present their
findings at the end of the semester to the professor, their classmates, and
possibly others. In seminar format, students will discuss common readings and
constructively critique one another’s research. Peer-review, with class
periods devoted entirely to students’ research work, will be a core
component of this course. Prerequisite: senior sociology major and permission of
instructor. (Fall) | | 34-001, 002,
003, 004 | SELECTED TOPICS. May be repeated with change
in topic. | | 34-301, 302, 303,
304 | SELECTED TOPICS. May be repeated with change in
topic. | | 34-901, 902, 903,
904 | TUTORIAL. | | 34-941,
942–944, 946 | ACADEMIC INTERNSHIP. Prerequisite:
Sociology major of junior or senior standing and permission of instructor. Must
be taken Pass/D/F. | | 34-951, 952,
953, 954 | INDEPENDENT STUDY. Prerequisites: Senior
standing and a minimum of 3.0 grade point average during the previous semester.
May be repeated with change in
content. | | 34-983 | HONORS.
By invitation only. |
Anthropology (ANT)
| 35-103 | INTRODUCTION
TO ANTHROPOLOGY. This course provides a critical understanding of the
similarities and differences in cultures and peoples through time and space and
of the application of anthropological knowledge to contemporary global issues.
Topics covered may include the history of anthropology; human evolution; the
idea of race; gender across cultures; kinship; political organization;
economies; consumption; religion; language; ethics; and fieldwork. (Each
semester) (ScS)
(IP) | | 35-203 | ANTHROPOLOGICAL
THEORY. This course introduces students to the major theories of human society
and culture that anthropologists have developed. The course will begin with
early travel writing, and then move through the late
19th to the mid-20th centuries. At least half of
the course will cover contemporary, or post-1970s, anthropological theory (such
as feminist and post-modernist theories, cultural studies, theories of culture
and power). Prerequisite: Anthropology 35-103. Offered fall of even-numbered
years. | | 35-214 | ETHNOGRAPHIC
METHODS. This course introduces students to the variety of field methods
employed by cultural anthropologists (e.g. participant observation, interviewing
techniques and other qualitative and quantitative methods). Students will be
expected to use these methods themselves in projects throughout the course.
Prerequisite: Anthropology 35-103. Offered spring of odd-numbered
years. | | 35-223 | LATIN
AMERICAN CULTURES. This course explores contemporary Latin America through an
in-depth analysis of the following five themes: ethnicity and race; gender and
sexuality; poverty, urbanization, and violence; the United States in Latin
America; immigration and transnationalism. Cases from different parts of Latin
America will be examined, with special emphasis on Andean South America.
Prerequisite: Anthropology 35-103 or permission of
instructor. | | 35-233 | LATINO
CULTURES IN THE U.S. This course explores immigration patterns from Latin
America and the experiences of Latinos and Latinas in the United States,
including: What it means to be Latino/a; the roles of language, gender, class,
national origin, and race in Latino and Latina identities; the cultural traits
that Latinos and Latinas have in common with each other and with other
Americans; and the differences that exist among Latinos, Latinas and other
Americans. Issues of history, culture, gender, class, language, human rights and
representations will be explored. Prerequisite: Anthropology
35-103. | | 35-324 | GENDER,
POWER AND VIOLENCE. This course examines state, institutional, and interpersonal
violence in different cultural settings (especially in Latin America) to analyze
how gender and power are articulated through each of these forms of violence.
Writings by scholars and activists from diverse backgrounds and case studies
from around the world challenge participants to think across disciplinary and
national boundaries. Prerequisite: Anthropology 35-103. Also Feminist Studies
04-384.
(Spring) | | 35-343 | RACE,
CLASS AND GENDER IN THE CARIBBEAN. This course critically examines how the
constructs of race, class and gender shape everyday life in the Caribbean. The
course will cover history and politics, language, music, “sports”
(public fun from cricket to Christmas to Carnival), families and social
organization, religions and health, development migration and tourism.
Throughout the course, the global nature of Caribbean cultures will be
considered. Prerequisite: Anthropology 35-103 or Feminist Studies 04-103. Also
Feminist Studies
04-323. | | 35-434 | GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE. An exploration of global environmental issues from a
perspective that foregrounds questions of social inequality (differences in
wealth, race, gender, indigeneity, national identity, etc.). Following an
overview of the U.S. environmental justice movement, and a consideration of
global inequality, global issues such as global climate change, consumerism,
pollution and toxic substances, economic development, agriculture, resource
extraction and bio-diversity conservation are examined. Student research
projects are a critical component of this course. Prerequisite: Anthropology
35-103 or Feminist Studies 04-103. Also Environmental Studies 49-444, Feminist
Studies 04-494.
(Fall) | | 35-463 |
WOMEN GODDESSES AND RELIGION. See Religion 19-323. (H)
(R) | | 35-473 | GENDER
AND GENERATION IN AFRICA. See History 16-473.
(H) | | 35-764 | ADVANCED
RESEARCH SEMINAR IN LATIN AMERICAN POLITICS. See Political Science
32-764. | | 35-964 | SENIOR
SEMINAR. The anthropology capstone requires students to develop a major paper,
ideally from the data generated by their field research project (requirement
IV). In this endeavor, students will apply current anthropological theory to
their findings and construct a coherent argument that weaves together the
relevant theory and their data. Students will work with each other and their
professor throughout the capstone. Peer-review, with class periods being
entirely devoted to each student’s work in turn, will be a fundamental
part of this course. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
(Spring) | | 35-001, 002, 003,
004 | SELECTED TOPICS. May be repeated with change in
topic. | | 35-301, 302, 303,
304 | SELECTED TOPICS. These are courses that fall out
of our typical range of anthropology courses. Offered infrequently. May be
repeated with content
change. | | 35-901, 902, 903,
904 | TUTORIAL. | | 35-941,
942, 943, 944 | ACADEMIC INTERNSHIP. Prerequisite:
Anthropology major above first year standing and permission of instructor. Must
be taken Pass/D/F. | | 35-951, 952,
953, 954 | INDEPENDENT STUDY. Prerequisites: Junior
standing and a minimum of 3.0 grade point average during the previous semester.
(May be repeated with change in
content.) | | 35-983 | HONORS.
By invitation only. |
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