Anth 120S Culture, Heritage and Identity 3
This course explores how communities understand and preserve their heritage, whether it be through historical documents, ethnographic descriptions, archaeology, or oral history, and how these ways of understanding heritage are used to maintain identity and cultural values.
Anth 151S Introduction to Anthropology 3
A comprehensive, systems-oriented study of general anthropology covering the four major subfields (archaeology, biological anthropology, linguistic anthropology, and ethnology). This course is recommended as a beginning course for students who have had no previous background in anthropology. Fall and winter terms.
Anth 171T World Archaeology 4
This course serves as an introduction to the great multiplicity of cultures of the past. In reviewing world archaeology, students are introduced not only to the great range of archaeological techniques, but also to how Western perception of other peoples’ pasts have colored our interpretations. Offered on demand.
Anth 201T Introduction to Archaeology 4
This course is designed to introduce the beginning student to the basic techniques, concepts, and theories of archaeology and its relation to the wide field of anthropology. Fall and winter terms.
Anth 208N Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Cultural Survival 4
Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is an integrated body of spiritual and practical knowledge that has evolved over vast stretches of time through the successful adaptation of a culture to its local environment. In this course, students will be introduced to the ways in which different cultures organize and categorize domains of TEK, including plants, animals, landscapes and kin. This class will also address the growing question of cultural survival in relation to environmental loss, as it is increasingly apparent that cultural diversity is directly related to biological diversity.
Anth 210R Introduction to Sociocultural Anthropology 4
Sociocultural anthropology (also known as ethnology) deals with the relationship of culture to society and the individual. This course is designed for the beginning student and introduces the basic concepts, theories, and methods of this broad field. It also looks at the application of ethnological thought in considering modern human realities and problems, and in understanding the relationship of cultural and expressive forms to identity.
Anth 212 Applied Anthropology 4
Applied and practicing anthropologists directly serve the needs and interests of communities and organizations around the world. This course provides an introduction to the ways in which anthropology and anthropologists work toward finding solutions to real world problems. A case study approach provides the student with methods for seeing how social and environmental problems are defined, solutions generated, and outcomes evaluated.
Anth 213S Peasant Societies 4
This course provides a study of agricultural societies throughout the world and the position of these societies within more complex systems. The instructor may select a specific area for in-depth study to complement a more general, systemic perspective on world peasantries. Winter term.
Anth 215R Magic and Religion 3
This course provides an inquiry into the forms that spiritual and religious beliefs take cross-culturally and investigates the various practices and symbols through which these beliefs are expressed and enacted in public life. Summer session.
Anth 217R Cultural Images of Women and Men 4
This course examines the images of gender and sexuality that permeate our society and that contribute to the definition and delimitation of identity and autonomy. Special attention is given to examining social hierarchies that underlay and are modified by the discourse surrounding and representations of male and female behavioral expectations. Any and all cultural products will be our objects of inquiry and analysis, from film and advertising to autobiography and other self-portraits. Our goal is to arrive at a coherent understanding of the relationship of images to social power, equality, and inequality. Offered on demand.
Anth 220 Colorado Archaeology 3
This course covers the prehistoric and historic archaeology of Colorado. It examines the historical development of archaeology in the state, our current state of knowledge, and how Colorado archaeology has developed in relation to the wider goals of archaeology. Offered on demand.
Anth 236Tx Introduction to Biological Anthropology 4
This course provides a study of the biological development of humankind and the modern understanding of human variation from a technological, critical, ethical, and evolutionary perspective. Topics to be explored in the classroom and laboratory contexts include the biological basis of the race concept, the workings of Mendelian genetics, forensic anthropology and the basics of primate evolution.
Anth 243S Food: Systems of Production, Distribution, and Consumption 4
This course explores the centrality of food systems in local and global contexts. It examines the interrelated historic, economic, political and gendered features of food production, distribution, and consumption via cross-cultural comparison. Special attention is paid to the dialectic of material and symbolic elements where our goal is to understand the place of food in systems of power that include familial, cultural, industrial and institutional forms.
Anth 259 Field Training in Archaeology 4-8
Actual on-site training in the techniques of archaeological survey and excavation. Students spend full days, five days a week, in the field for seven weeks. They receive intensive instruction in field survey, remote sensing, and all aspects of excavation, recording, mapping, photography, artifact classification, field laboratory techniques, and site interpretation. A written description of the field school for each year will be furnished to prospective students. Summer term.
Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor.
Anth 299 Individual Study 2-4
This course is to be used in a limited manner to provide learning experiences in lower-division anthropological inquiry not provided by the major departmental offerings. A learning contract will be established for the student, with expectations stated explicitly. This course may not be used to fulfill major requirements or to replace a major departmental offering. Fall, winter, and summer terms.
Prerequisite: Comp 150 and consent of instructor.
Anth 302 Research Issues in Evolutionary Anthropology 2
An exploration of the changing knowledge base of hominid and primate evolution. Alternate years.
Prerequisite: Anthropology 236Tx or permission of instructor.
Anth 303W Anthropological Debates 4
This course fulfills the anthropology major’s Group W composition requirement. It is organized around a controversial theme and debate within the discipline. The student will enter into this debate by reading, writing, and speaking. Course debate themes will alternate from semester to semester. Examples of course themes include the “race” concept, indigenous rights, ethics, repatriation, archaeological theory, food and nutrition, among others. Fall and winter terms.
Prerequisites: Comp 150 or Comp 126 or Comp 250, and Anth 210 or Anth 201.
Anth 310 Geoarchaeology 4
This course offers an interdisciplinary approach to the study of archaeology. The conceptual foundations and historical relationships between archaeology and the geosciences are explored. The major focus of this course is on the methods and techniques borrowed from the geosciences (geology, geography, geomorphology) that relate to the reconstruction of the archaeological landscape.
Anth 313 The Archaeology of Greece and Rome 4
This course examines the past of Greece and Rome, from the Bronze Age to the end of the Classical and Imperial periods, drawing on both archaeology and other relevant disciplines. The course situates the development of classical archaeology in its historical and socio-political context and addresses some current issues of relevance to both classical archaeology and archaeology in general.
Anth 314 Greece: Culture, Archaeology 4
This off-campus course introduces students to the rich culture, archaeology and history of Greece through an intensive study of some of the major archaeological, historical and cultural sites and locations in Greece and the Aegean Islands. Students will be expected to participate in all activities and also conduct independent research on topics of their choice. This course requires that the class travel to Greece and the Greek islands and, therefore, requires additional fees.
Anth 316 Internship in Anthropology 1-6
This course offers a guided framework for practical experience for work carried out by students in discipline-related governmental and non-governmental agency projects. Interns will be involved in effective public service in order to promote student understanding of complex social, political, economic, scientific, and philosophical issues. Internship examples include, but are not limited to, work in archaeological, museum, and public health contexts. Course credit is based on 1) satisfactory performance of 30 hours of work for each credit earned; 2) fulfillment of a learning contract with a faculty sponsor; and 3) the satisfactory completion of a final project, usually a paper. Offered fall, winter, and summer terms.
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.
Anth 320 Archaeological Lab Techniques 4
This lecture course covers laboratory techniques and the analysis of prehistoric artifacts, with special emphasis on lithic, ceramic and bone technologies. This course also introduces the student to the preparation of technical reports.
Prerequisite: Anth 201.
Anth 330 Prehistory of the Southwest 4
This course provides a comprehensive survey of the major archaeological traditions of the prehistoric Southwestern United States, and the environmental and cultural influences that made them distinct. Fall term.
Anth 340 Ancient Egypt 3
Using archaeological data, this course examines the development of a major civilization and its relationship to both the earlier civilizations of Mesopotamia and the later developing civilizations of the Mediterranean.
Anth 341 Prehistory of Europe 4
This course provides a survey of early cultures of Europe from the earliest evidence of humans until the development of civilizations.
Anth 348 Prehistory of the Americas 4
The primary focus of this course is the development of the indigenous cultures of North America, with a secondary emphasis on the influences of the societies of Central and South America. Emphasis is also placed on evaluating the degree to which our understanding of the past is influenced by both the discipline of anthropology and by contemporary Western values.