Anthropology - Bachelor [4 Years]
$54,838 /Yr On-campus full_time

Bachelor Anthropology

At Haverford we teach socio-cultural anthropology: the comparative study of social organization, family life, subsistence, exchange, politics, ritual, religion, and expressive culture in diverse human communities. Socio-cultural anthropologists promote knowledge and broaden intercultural understanding through sustained participant-observation fieldwork; they study small-scale indigenous and rural communities, state societies and urban populations, and transnational polities and cultures.

The discipline of anthropology:

  • To understand the unique contribution of anthropology to the study of the social, and the ways in which it addresses the most pressing issues of our times.
  • To learn how to situate strange and familiar social practices and cultural categories in shifting and contingent historical, economic, and political formations and structures.
  • To recognize the impact of the position of the scholar in the production of knowledge.
  • To know the key figures in anthropology and their specific theoretical, methodological, and empirical contributions to the history and development of the discipline.
  • To understand key contemporary debates in the field and how older categories of race, culture, nation, and language have shaped recent theoretical innovations.
  • To be familiar with the subfields of the discipline (e.g., political and legal anthropology, medical anthropology, the anthropology of religion, environmental anthropology, visual anthropology, etc.) and their contributions to interdisciplinary knowledge production.

Examinations

Exam Type Exam Name Score Out of Score Exam Level