College of Arts and Sciences

Anthropology and Sociology

Available Options

Anthropology and Sociology department web site

 

The information on this page pertains to program requirements for students who matriculated in the 2023-2024 academic year.  View requirements for previous catalog years here.

Program Overview

The Anthropology and Sociology (ANSO) major and the anthropology minor offer a multidimensional perspective on self, culture, society.  The courses in both major and minor examine culture and society with a focus on language, meaning, difference, and power.  Students are invited to cultivate reflexive, interpretive, and emphatic forms of cultural analysis.

ANSO majors benefit from the related yet distinct emphases of anthropology and sociology to better understand a globalized, multicultural, and often quite fraught world.  The program prepares students for a variety of vocations in the global society as well as for graduate study in anthropology, sociology, and for various interdisciplinary areas like women’s and gender and ethnic studies.  It also is a good preparation for law school and other professional education and training.


B.A. Degree Requirements

The major offers strong preparation for careers in global human rights, law and public administration, medicine and global public health, activism, social work, advertising and marketing, politics and public policy, business, banking, and consulting, to name just a few.  The various courses in the ANSO program examine social groups and processes in a wide diversity of contexts, with an emphasis on critical thinking and social justice.

The program has flexibility built into the core course requirements and combines anthropology courses with sociology courses and allows courses from the program in rhetoric.  Students are urged to work with their advisers to assure selection of courses compatible with their educational and career objectives.

Course

Credits

SOC 001 – Introduction to Sociology

3

ANTH 002 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

3

Choose two theory-intensive courses, one in anthropology (ANTH) and one in sociology (SOC), from the list below:

6

ANTH 081 - Borders and Boundaries

3

ANTH 170 - Global Political Violence

3

ANTH 175 - Medical Anthropology

3

ANTH 180 - Ritual and Myth

3

SOC 080 - Social Problems

3

SOC 085 - Sociology of Everyday Life

3

SOC 180 - Constructing Normal

3

SOC 151 - Criminology

3

SOC 170 - Deviance

3

SOC 175 – Theories of Inequality

3

ANTH 176 - Documenting Lives

3

Chose two research design courses.  One course from anthropology and one from sociology, from the list below:

6

ANTH 046 - Anthropology of Religion

3

ANTH 140 - The Practice of Oral History

3

ANTH 153 - Documentary Video Challenge

3

ANTH 156 - Ethnographic Methods

3

SOC 042 - Sociological Inquiry

3

ANTH 158 - Representing Race

3

SOC 159 - Methods of Social Research

3

STAT 050 - Statistics for Social Sciences

3

Choose one community-engaged learning course from the list below.  May not be double-counted as research design or theory intensive.

3

ANTH 046 - Anthropology of Religion

3

ANTH 140 - The Practice of Oral History

3

SOC 153 - Documentary Video Challenge

3

SOC 175 - Medical Anthropology

3

ANTH 180 - Ritual and Myth

3

SOC 076 - Sociology of Childhood

3

SOC 146 - Restorative Justice

3

ANTH 158 - Representing Race

3

Choose four additional elective courses in Anthropology or Sociology.

12

ANTH 199 - Senior Capstone Seminar

3

TOTAL

36

A maximum of 9 hours of transfer credit may be used for the ANSO major.  Transfer courses may not be used to fulfill the theory-intensive, research design, community-engaged, or capstone requirements.

To graduate with an ANSO major, students must earn grades of "C-" or higher in each core course.  Students completing the ANSO major may not earn a major sociology.

Students who wish to take courses from related areas must petition and have the substitution approved by the anthropology adviser.  Petitions are available from anthropology and sociology faculty. To receive approval for the minor, a non-anthropology course must offer a cross-cultural, global and comparative perspective; examine a geographic area, culture or other subject in a manner amenable to cultural anthropology; or concentrate on or encourage the use of a methodological approach, theoretical framework or substantive problem that is of historical importance and/or complementary to cultural anthropology.


Anthropology Minor

The anthropology minor requires completion of 18 hours of coursework in anthropology, including one entry-level course and an additional 15 hours of anthropology courses.  Students may petition for up to 6 of the 18 hours be allowed from related disciplines or concentrations subject to advisor and department approval.  Such courses must contain a cross-cultural, global, and comparative perspective; examine a geographic area, culture, or subject in a way similar to cultural anthropology; or focus on a method, theory, or substantive problem of historical importance relevant to cultural anthropology.

A maximum of 9 hours of transfer credit may be applied toward the anthropology minor.

Required Courses Credits
ANTH 002 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology 3
Choose five additional five courses in anthropology. 15
TOTAL 18

The information in this catalog does not constitute a contract between the university and the student. The university reserves the right to make changes in curricula, admission policies and processes, tuition and financial aid, academic standards and guidelines, student services and any other regulations or policies set forth in this catalog without giving prior notice.