Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Undergraduate–Newark
 
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About the University
Undergraduate Education in Newark
Liberal Arts Colleges
Admission to the Liberal Arts Colleges
Newark College of Arts and Sciences
University College–Newark
Academic Programs and Courses
Availablity of Courses, Majors, and Minor Programs
Course Notation Information
Academic Foundations 003
African American and African Studies 014
Allied Health Technologies 045
American Studies 050
Ancient and Medieval Civilizations 060
Anthropology 070
Major Requirements: NCAS
Minor Requirements: NCAS
Minor Requirements: UC–N
Courses
Arabic 074
Art, Design, and Art History (080; 081; 082; 083; 085)
Biological Sciences
Chemistry 160
Chinese 165
Clinical Laboratory Sciences 191
Computer Science 198
Earth and Environmental Sciences (Geology 460)
Economics 220
Urban Education 300
English (350 and 352)
English: Composition and Writing 355
Environmental Sciences 375
French 420
Geoscience Engineering 465
Greek 490
History (History 510, American 512)
Honors 525
International Affairs
Italian 560
Japanese 565
Journalism and Media Studies 086
Korean 574
Latin 580
Legal Studies
Linguistics 615
Mathematics 640
Medical Technology 660
Microbiology
Music 087
Persian 685
Philosophy (Philosophy 730, Applied Ethics 733)
Physics 750
Political Science 790
Portuguese and Lusophone World Studies 812
Psychology 830
Religious Studies
Russian 860
Slavic Literature 861
Social Work 910
Sociology 920
Spanish 940
Theater 088
Urban Studies 975
Video Production 089
Women's Studies 988
Administration and Faculty
Consortium with New Jersey Institute of Technology
College of Nursing
Rutgers Business School: Undergraduate–Newark
School of Criminal Justice
School of Public Affairs and Administration
General Information
Divisions of the University
Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  Newark Undergraduate Catalog 2011–2013 Liberal Arts Colleges Academic Programs and Courses Anthropology 070 Courses  

Courses

21:070:203 Introduction to Physical Anthropology and Archaeology (3) The biological and cultural evolution of the human species is traced by examining the fossil and archaeological record, primate behavior, and the significance of human variation.
21:070:204 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) A study of various ways of life--from hunting and gathering to industrial societies. Topics such as marriage, economics, politics, and religion examined; comparisons made to illustrate the principles underlying cultural similarities and differences.
21:070:207 Indians of North America (3) A survey of Native American cultures, including the Inuit of the Arctic, the Iroquois, the buffalo hunters of the plains, and the pueblo dwellers of the Southwest, among others.
21:070:220 Anthropological Theory and Methods (3) General historical framework; 19th-century and contemporary evolutionism, functionalism, structuralism, cultural ecology, Marxism, and postmodernism; the impact of feminism; and anthropological research in libraries and museums, and in the field.
21:070:301 Anthropology of Development (3) Theoretical approaches to the study of developing nations. Ethnographies that describe the impact of development on people's lives, cultures, and identities.
21:070:303 Anthropology of Postcolonialism (3) Postcolonial responses to cultural and economic domination in locations such as multinational corporations, media productions, tourist attractions, and religious sites.
21:070:305 Culture and Personality (3) Comparative study of the dynamics of human development and its cultural patterning; readings include autobiographies and ethnographies from several societies and theoretical approaches to understanding the cultural structuring of perception, interaction, and experience; emphasis on interpreting observed social interactions and utilizing life histories.
21:070:306 Anthropology of Power (3) The body politic and the politics of bodies are ways in which anthropologists analyze the formal and informal organization of power and authority. Anthropological studies of kings and chiefs, lawmakers, and ritual leaders.
21:070:309 Medical Anthropology (3) Cross-cultural perspectives on health beliefs and practices; social organization of health care institutions; sociocultural factors in physical and mental health; relationship between human health and the social environment.
21:070:310 Comparative Religion (3) Examines religion as an aspect of society and the human condition. This course raises questions about the origin, function, structure, and meaning of religion. It uses the broadest possible comparisons, particularly religion as practiced by "tribal" peoples, and draws on students' own ideas about religion. Topics include ritual, belief, magic, witchcraft, communicating with spirits, and religious movements.
21:070:314 Topics in Anthropology (3) Topics vary each semester. Consult department for current information.
21:070:316 Peoples and Cultures of Africa (3) Cultural areas of Africa south of the Sahara, from the Bushman and Pygmy hunters to advanced empires of Uganda and the west coast. Technology, society, art, and religion of the indigenous cultures; African cultural history; continuity and change in African cultures today.
21:070:319 Anthropology through Film (3) Examination and analysis of selected societies and cultures through films and complementary written texts. Study of the process of making documentary and ethnographic films and the related problems of representing "realities" through visual media.
21:070:320 Human Rights in a Global World (3) Analysis of the cultural dimensions of human rights. Examines the origins and forms human rights take with particular emphasis on how human rights ideas, laws, practices, movements, and institutions are enacted, transformed, contested, and understood in different local worlds.
21:070:321 Genocide (3) Examines the origins, dynamics, endings, and aftermaths of genocide in comparative perspective, with particular emphasis on how genocide is shaped by cultural understandings and institutions.
21:070:324 Human Rights Theory into Practice (1) First of two 1-credit classes for students participating in the Human Rights Floor living-learning community that blends theory, practice, and service learning to enable students to understand the relevance of human rights concepts and theories to 21st-century issues.
21:070:325 Human Rights Applied (1) Second of two 1-credit classes for students participating in the Human Rights Floor living-learning community that blends theory, practice, and service learning to enable students to understand the relevance of human rights concepts and theories to 21st-century issues.
21:070:331 Urban Anthropology (3) Examines the theoretical underpinnings of a variety of urban studies done by anthropologists; individual or group research project.
21:070:337 Anthropology of Inequality (3) Class, race, and gender, and how they intersect with power and domination. Study of how systems of inequality work, how they are maintained, and how they are transformed.
21:070:340 Comparative Roles of Women (3) Women's roles in societies that range from hunting and gathering bands to agricultural and pastoral chiefdoms, from ancient China to socialist Cuba. Women's experience in the family and community setting, as workers, individuals, and leaders. The impact of class, race, and gender on women's experience and consciousness.
21:070:346 The Cultural History of the New York Police (3) Explores the role of policing in modern society by examining the origins and development of the New York City Police Department, from the events leading up to the founding of a unified day and night force in 1845 to the reforms following the Knapp Commission in the early 1970s. Uses extensive readings to ask how changing social and political forces affected the organization and policies of the police and how police actions in turn shaped the character of urban life.
21:070:350 Environmental Anthropology (3) Study of anthropological works that interpret cultural phenomena from an ecological viewpoint; basic principles of ecology used to analyze communities and human populations in indigenous, colonial, and developing societies; cultural methods of adaptation and the critical role of technology and economic organization in human ecosystems.
21:070:352 Peoples and Cultures of Latin America (3) Latin-American cultures studied with emphasis on contributions and interactions of Native Americans, Iberians, and Africans. Examines the impact of colonialism and neocolonialism; structures of class, race, and gender; and ongoing efforts to implement change. Readings focus on Brazil, Guatemala, and Peru.
21:070:353 Peoples and Cultures of Southeast Asia (3) Analysis of the societies of Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and other countries of Southeast Asia, which include the tribal peoples of the jungle, the peasantry and fishing groups, the large merchants, and princes; impact of the new Western technology on rural and urban family life and other cultural changes occurring in the area.
21:070:361 Selected Areas Studies (3) Analysis of selected cultures and societies, such as those indigenous to North America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and/or New Guinea and Australia.
21:070:367 Archaeology of the Old World (3) Examination of the evidence for the origins and development of culture in Paleolithic Europe, Asia, and Africa, and the rise of civilization in the Near East.
21:070:390 Culture, Political Violence, and Genocide (3) Explores the cultural dimensions of political violence and genocide; focuses loosely on perpetrator motivation. Includes discussion of the cultural, socioeconomic, and historical origins of political violence in countries such as Cambodia, Rwanda, Nazi Germany, Guatemala, Sri Lanka, India, and the former Yugoslavia; the conceptual meanings of terms like "violence" and "genocide" and the aftermaths of mass violence and terror.
21:070:420 War (3) An overview of anthropological knowledge about war. This course covers biological explanations; archaeological evidence; and the relation of war to ecology, economy, social structure, gender, politics, and beliefs in tribal societies. Also covered is the link between war and states, and the impact of Western expansion on indigenous warfare. The last part of the semester focuses on recent ethnic conflict and other identity-linked violence, future prospects for war in the world, and peace. One week will be devoted to events since 9/11/2001.
21:070:425 Research in Anthropology (3) Topics vary depending upon current focus of instructor. Prerequisites: Three anthropology courses or permission of the instructor.
21:070:475 Culture and Globalization  (3) Analysis of the cultural dimensions of globalization. Examines how global flows of people, information, resources, identities, ideas, commodities, symbols, and images impact upon and are transformed in local contexts.
21:070:492 Seminar in Anthropology (3) Intensive study of a single topic or area of anthropological relevance conducted through the exchange of information by participating members of the seminar. Prerequisites: 21:070:204 and two 300-level anthropology courses, or permission of instructor.
21:070:495 Independent Study in Anthropology (3) Special, individualized study of an anthropological topic. Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing and permission of instructor.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732-445-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: Campus Information Services.

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