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Anthropology Courses

Anthropology offers Social Science and Science Courses; below are first, Social Science courses, then Science courses.
Anthropology Social Science Courses

Key to Course Descriptions

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| Course Winter Timetable |


SSC199Y1
First Year Seminar [52S]


SSC199H1
First Year Seminar [26S]

Undergraduate seminar that focuses on specific ideas, questions, phenomena or controversies, taught by a regular Faculty member deeply engaged in the discipline. Open only to newly admitted first-year students. It may serve as a distribution requirement course; see page 48.


ANT100Y1
Introduction to Anthropology [52L]

Society and culture from various anthropological perspectives: socio-cultural, biological, archaeological, and linguistic.


ANT200Y1
Introduction to Archaeology (52L, 26P)

Cultures in the Old and New Worlds from an archaeological perspective. Principles of prehistoric research are applied to archaeological information, from the Early Pleistocene to the beginning of written history.
Recommended Preparation: ANT100Y1


ANT204Y1
Social & Cultural Anthropology [52L, 26T]

Basic approaches to the understanding of social and cultural organization in societies of varying complexity. Comparative social institutions: economic, political, familial, and ritual. Belief systems and symbolic thought, the individual in society, sources of stability and change in socio-cultural systems. Anthropological perspectives on current social issues.
Recommended preparation: ANT100Y1
ANT 210H1 Craft of Social/Cultural Anthropology [26S]
This course introduces students to the skills they need to read theory, conduct research, write essays, and do presentations in the field of social/cultural anthropology. The emphasis is on interactive, small group learning. The course is highly recommended for students pursuing a specialist in social/cultural anthropology.
Co-requisite: ANT204Y1


ANT253H1
Language & Society [26L]

This course introduces linguistic analysis with a view towards its application to the study of the relation between culture and social structure. The interplay of pronunciation, grammar, semantics, and discourse with rituals, ideologies, and constructions of social meaning and worldview are discussed in tandem with the traditional branches of linguistic analysis—phonology, morphology, grammar, syntax, and semantics. The objective of the course is to provide a broad framework for understanding the role of language in society.
Recommended Preparation: ANT100Y1

Exclusion: JAL253H1


ANT299Y1
Research Opportunity Program

Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. See page 48 for details.


ARH305H1
Archaeological Interpretation

See Archaeology


ANT311Y1
Archaeological Fieldwork [TBA]

Practical field training through six weeks of excavation on an archaeological site. Basic principles of artifact handling and classification. (Offered only in Summer Session)
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1


ARH312Y1
Archaeological Laboratory

See Archaeology


ANT315H1
Arctic Archaeology [26L]

Archaeology and ethnohistory of Arctic cultures. Emphasis is on variation in social organization, settlement pattern, economy, ideology, and interaction with the expanding European world-system.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1


ANT316H1
Ancient Cultures of Mesoamerica [26L]

This course provides an introduction to the cultures of Mesoamerica, from the first arrival of indigenous peoples to the appearance of the Spaniards in the sixteenth century. Students will become acquainted with cultures including Olmec, Zapotec, Teotihuacan, Maya, and Aztec, while also considering issues of method and evidence.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1
This is a Social Science course.


ANT317H1
Archaeology of Eastern North America [26L]

This course examines the precontact and early contact period culture history of eastern North America, including Ontario, through archaeological evidence. Topics covered include the earliest peopling of the region at the end of the Ice Age, diversity of hunter-gatherer societies, introduction of agriculture, and the development of the dynamic First Nations societies who eventually met and interacted with Europeans.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1
This is a Social Science course.


ANT319Y1
Archaeology of North America (formerly ANT 310Y1) [52L]

This course examines human prehistory in North America, North of Mexico, from the time of earliest occupation to European contact. Special topics include Paleoindian and Archaic adaptations, the rise of complex hunter-gatherers, origins of farming and the evolution of complex chiefdoms.

Exclusion: ANT309H1, 310Y1
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1


ANT322H1
Anthropology of Youth Culture [26L]

This course will present various perspectives on the nature and dynamics of youth culture. It will discuss the research accumulated over the past quarter century on youth lifestyles, from fashion and music to the formation and spread of slang. It will also look at the various critical and controversial aspects of adolescence in contemporary culture.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT323Y1
Social Theory through Contemporary Culture [52L, 26T]

Theories of culture and society, with examples from ordinary life and fantasy and their popular expressions.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1/ANT253H1/ one other 200+ course in ANT/SOC


ANT324H1
Tourism & Globalization (formerly ANT443H1) [26L]

The course uses tourism as a lens to examine global connections. Particular focus will be on the politics of cultural encounters. Drawing examples from diverse ethnographic materials, the course explores how different visions of
the world come into contact, negotiated and transformed, and how tourist encounters shape people’s everyday lives.

Exclusion: ANT 443H1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 plus any 300-level course in Social-Cultural or Linguistic Anthropology
This is a Social Science course.


JAL328H1
Writing Systems [26L]

Introduction to writing systems; their historical development, their relationship to language, and their role in culture and society. (Given by the Departments of Anthropology and Linguistics)
Prerequisite: ANT100Y1/LIN100Y1


ANT329H1
Language & Power Structure (formerly ANT329Y1) [26L]

The role of language and symbolism in the representation and manipulation of ideology and power structure. Case materials drawn from the study of verbal arts, gender, law, ethnic relations, consumption patterns, advertising, and politics with a focus on North America.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1/ANT253H1/ one of 200+ series “Y1” course in SOC/POL/Women’s Studies

Exclusion: ANT329Y1


ANT340H1
Anthropology of Latin America [26L]

Provides a framework for understanding current anthropological issues in the different geo-political regions of Latin America. Special attention will be paid to historical/conceptual development of the discipline in the region, and the course will introduce a debate about the dealth and “resurgence” of area studies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1
ANT 341H1 China in Transition (formerly ANT 341Y1) [26L]
This course offers a general introduction to contemporary China in a global context from an anthropological perspective. This year-long course covers four major aspects of Chinese culture and society: Political Economy, Social Relations, Modernities and Modernization, and Overseas Chinese.

Exclusion: ANT 341Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT343H1
Social Anthropology of Gender (formerly ANT 343Y1) [26L]

Social anthropological perspectives on variations in gender roles and systems. Examines, through comparison of ethnography, the relationship of gender to social organization, economic and political processes, belief systems and social change.

Exclusion: ANT 343Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT346H1
Anthropology of Food [26L]

Social anthropological perspective on the nature and meaning of food production, culinary cultures, industrial food, food as metaphor, and famine and hunger.
Prerequisite: ANT100Y1/ANT204Y1


ANT347Y1
Metropolis: Global Cities [52L]

The role of culture, cultural diversity, space and performance in urban institutions and settings. The cultural context and consequence of urbanization.
Recommended preparation: ANT204Y1


ANT348H1
Anthropology of Health (formerly ANT 348Y1) [26L]

Aspects of health and disease in cross-cultural perspective. Critical views on the interface between conventional “western” medicine and alternative, indigenous, and traditional therapeutic systems.

Exclusion: ANT 348Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT349H1
Globalization & Underdevelopment [26L]

The contribution of ethnographic study to the understanding of regional disparities within Western and Third World nations. The inter-relationship between persistent economic underdevelopment, expressions of regional identity and class formation by reference to comparative ethnographic examples.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT350H1
Globalization and the Changing World of Work [26L]

The course uses ethnographic material to examine the ways in which global forces have changed the nature of work in different sites since World War Two - North America, Europe, and the countries of the South are selectively included.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT352Y1
South Asia: Practices, Theories,        Representations [ 52L]

This course examines key themes in the constitution of South Asia as an area for ethnographic analysis. The first half analyzes classic texts in the anthropology of South Asia, examining the rise of gatekeeping concepts such as caste, the village, collectivity, and patriarchal social organization. The second half focuses on ethnographies of popular culture, sexuality and gender and political mobilizations.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1
This is a Social Science course.
ANT 353H1 Anthropology of Indigeneity, Primary Resources and Environment in Canada [26L]
The course will focus on the dynamic interplay between developments in Canadian Indigenous rights, contested understandings of the environment and primary resource exploration/development in mining, forestry and hydro. The changing relationship is challenging industry to re-think social/environmental responsibility, local vs national equity with implications beyond the Aboriginal community.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT354Y1
       Japan in Global Context: Anthropological Perspectives [52L]

This course examines how what we know as Japan and its culture has been constructed through various types of global interactions. The course uses popular culture, travel encounters and transnational capitalism as lenses for analyzing the dynamics of Japanese society. Topics include gender and sexuality, race and ethnicity, social and family life, work and leisure, and Japanese identity amid changing global power relations. The focus will be on cultural politics: how competing ideas of Japanese society are expressed through particular cultural practices, and how people engage with these practices in order to negotiate their positions in the world.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1
This is a Social Science course.


JAL355H1
Language and Gender [26L]

An introduction to some of the principal questions of feminist theory, as viewed from sociolinguistics. Topics include: socialization into gendered discourse patterns, cultural and ethnic differences in gendered interactions; the role of language and gender in legal, medical and labour settings; multilingualism, migration, imperialism and nationalism; sexuality, desire and queer linguistics, language, gender and globalization.
Prerequisite: One full course equivalent at the 200-level in ANT/JAL/LIN/SOC/WGS.
Recommended preparation: ANT204Y1/ANT253H1/NEW 262Y/ SOC 200Y/SOC214Y1/SOC215Y1


ANT356H1
Anthropology of Religion [26L]

This course introduces anthropological definitions of religion; debates on rituals and rites of passage; rationality, religion and modernity; belief and body; religion and the media. It also engages with studies in the anthropology of popular and transnational religion, and the politics of religious movements.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT357H1
Cultures of U.S. Empire [26L]

Anthropological perspectives on how continental and overseas expansion and conquest have shaped the cultures of the U.S. and of those it has dominated within and beyond its borders. Topics include interventions into health and education of colonized groups, sport and imperial masculinity, culture of U.S. military bases/cities, living with “terror.”
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT358H1
Medical Anthropology and Social Justice [26L]

It is widely acknowledged that sharp disparities in disease burden and access to medical care characterize global patterns in health. These disparities affect the life chances of much of the world’s population, based on class position, gender, and geographical region.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT359H1
Culture and Difference [13L, 10T]

The concept of culture in historical and current debates about difference between human beings. The relationship between anthropological and other treatments of difference (psychoanalytical, philosophical, literary, and artistic). Political implications: multiculturalism, separatism, imperialism.
Prerequisite: At least two 200-level courses in the humanities or social sciences.
Recommended preparation: ANT204Y1


ARH360Y1
Prehistory of the Near East [52L]

See Archaeology


ARH361H1
Field Archaeology        TBA

See Archaeology


ANT362Y1
       Anthropological Studies of Poverty, Social Inequality and the U.S. State [52L]

This course examines the growing field of U.S. anthropology through ethnographic studies focusing on state institutions and patterns of social inequality. Particular emphasis is placed on research examining local models of governance, policing, immigration reform, unionization and social assistance programs in the context of shifting governmental policies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT363Y1
Anthropology of State Societies [52L, 26T]

Origins, history and internal dynamics of early and modern state societies, examined with a view to placing our own system in an historical and comparative perspective. Case studies include material from Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe.

Exclusion: ANT363H1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT364Y1
Environment & Globalization [52L]

This course will examine the relationships between humans and the environment in the context of contemporary efforts to ‘develop’ within or in opposition to the political economy of neoliberal globalization. We will critically examine the discourses of progress and environment within a broader theoretical inquiry of structure/agency and power.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT365H1
Native America and the State (formerly ANT365Y1) [26L]

Culture areas and types existing in precontact and early contact times in North America; problems arising out of contacts between North American Indians and Euroamericans.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1

Exclusion: ANT 365Y1


ANT366H1
Anthropology of Social Movements: Theory and Method (formerly ANT366Y1) [26L, 13T]

Explores how anthropologists have traditionally studied social movements and how new social movements have challenged anthropologists to rethink some of their ethnographic methods and approaches. Some specific movements covered include those related to indigenous rights, environmentalism, refugees, gay and lesbian issues, biotechnology, new religions, and globalization.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1

Exclusion: ANT366Y1


ANT367Y1
Indigenous Spirituality [52L]

This course focuses upon religion and spirituality amongst peoples with a direct, experiential relationship to the world. The first term examines case studies from Australia, Native North America and Africa; the second term examines aspects of the “world religions’.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1/RLG201Y1


ANT395Y0
Special Topics in Anthropology [52S]


ANT396Y0
Special Topics in Anthropology [52S]

Studies in anthropology taken abroad. Areas of concentration vary depending on the instructor and year offered.
Recommended Preparation:ANT100Y1/ANT204Y1


ANT398H0
Independent Experiential Study Project


ANT399Y0
Independent Experiential Study Project

An instructor-supervised group project in an off-campus setting. See page 48 for details.


JAL401H1
Field Linguistics [52P]

Practice in language analysis based on elicited data from a native speaker of a foreign language, emphasizing procedures and techniques. (Given by the Departments of Anthropology and Linguistics)
Prerequisite: Completion of LIN322H1, LIN331H1 except for students in their final year where LIN331H1 is a corequisite.


ANT406H1
Lithic Analysis [26L,13P]

Core reduction strategies, replication, experimental archaeology, use-wear, design approaches, ground stone, inferring behaviour from lithic artifacts.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1, ARH312Y1, ARH305H1


ANT409H1
Archaeology of Landscapes & Regions [26L,13P]

The survey and spatial analysis of archaeological evidence over territories larger than individual camps, villages or towns. Settlement systems, regional exchange and communication, rank-size analysis, nearest neighbour analysis etc.
Prerequisite: ARH305H1
Recommended preparation: GGR270H1


ANT410H1
Hunter-Gatherers Past & Present [26S]

Examines the diversity of recent hunter-gatherer societies, as a source of analogues for understanding the archaeological record of past foraging peoples.
Prerequisite: ARH305H1


ANT411H1
Advanced Archaeological Theory [26S]

Seminar in the critical examination of major schools of archaeological thought.
Prerequisite: ARH305H1


ANT412H1
Historical Archaeology [26L, 13P]

Introduces the problems, methods and some of the material culture of colonial and industrial archaeology with emphasis on Canada and colonial America. Covers the use of documentary evidence, maps, architecture, and a variety of artifact classes.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1/HIS374H1/HIS384H1


ANT415Y1
Laboratory in Faunal Archaeo-Osteology [52S, 52P]

Examination and interpretation of faunal material from archaeological sites as evidence for culture.
Prerequisite: ARH312Y1


ANT417H1
Archaeology of Settlements & Households [26L]

Methods for studying the socio-spatial aspects of the archaeological evidence for households and communities.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1, ARH305H1


ANT419H1
Current Debates in Palaeolithic Archaelogy [26S]

Current research in Palaeolithic Archaeology reflecting emerging issues.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1 or ANT203Y1


ANT420H1
Archaeology of Inequality [26L]

How social complexity is manifested in the archaeological record. Origins and evolution of prehistoric complex societies, from small-scale chiefdoms to large-scale states.
Prerequisite: ANT200Y1, ARH305H1
Recommended preparation: ANT363Y1


ANT421H1
       Royal Courts of the Ancient New World [26L]

This course examines the institution of the royal court in the ancient New World as a nexus for negotiation of power and assertion of cultural identity. Case studies concentrate on the Maya; Aztec and Inca cultures provide important comparative contexts. We also explore the integration of textual and material evidence in investigating ancient cultures.
Prerequisite: ARH305H1
This is a Social Science course.


ANT425H1
Language in Anthropological Thought [26L]

How ideas about language fit into the overall views of humankind as expressed by selected anthropologists, linguists, sociologists, and philosophers.

Exclusion: ANT425Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1/ ANT253H1


ANT426H1
Orientalism: Western Views of of Muslims and Jews [39L]

Language and imagery representing the “oriental” in the West. Emphasis on representations of the “Semites”, the Islamic peoples of North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia, as well as the Jews from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century.
Prerequisite: ANT323Y1/ANT329H1/any 300-level course in INI/VIC/NMC/Jewish Studies


ANT427H1
Language, Ideology, & Political Economy [26S]

Theoretical and empirical studies on the role of language in the reproduction and transformation of ideology, hegemony and political economy. Topics may include language & colonialism, imperialism, globalization, nationalism, racism, sexism, bureaucratic interactions, environmentalism, migration, gentrification. Compares and contrasts critical discourse analytic and linguistic anthropological approaches to method and politics.
Prerequisite: ANT253H1
Recommended Preparation: ANT329H1


ANT431H1
Mortuary Practices in the Archaeological Record [26L]

Death is the only rite of passage that leaves frequent archaeological traces, through burial and mortuary rituals. It provides us with a rare opportunity to move beyond material culture and look into the cognitive, ritual and ideological aspects of a past human group, bringing archaeology closer to addressing anthropological questions. As we learn how to examine cultural identity, represented through burial and ancestral ritual, and biological reality of demographic, occupational and pathological conditions, the course will provide students with an understanding of the interpretative potential of the human skeleton as a central feature of any burial. The course is of interest to archaeological and biological anthropology students but is not limited to these two fields..
Prerequisite: Any 300-level course from Group A or C
This is a Social Science or Science course.


ANT440H1
Society in Transition [26L]

An exploration of the conceptual tools used to understand reflexive modernity. Focus on the articulated web of global and local networks that produce simultaneously inequalities and potentially new identities and collectivities.

Exclusion: ANT440Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1, at least one area course in anthropology


ANT442H1
Anthropology and New Technologies [26L]

The relationship between technology and culture through a focus on reproductive, genetic and communications technologies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1, a 300 level, or above, Social Cultural Anthropology course


ANT444Y1
Research Methods in Social & Linguistic Anthropology [52S]

Social and linguistic anthropological approaches to research in urban settings. Methodology, field techniques and research ethics. Students must formulate and complete a field research project.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT445H1
Science as Culture and Practice [26S]

This course examines science and technology from an anthropological perspective. Throughout the course, in addition to introducing major concepts of science studies, we will examine multiple “concrete things,” like computers as cultural artifacts, connected to wider social, political, economic, ideological, and cultural contexts.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1
Recommended Preparation: one science course


ANT446H1
Anthropology of Western Europe:        Issues and Ideas (formerly ANT 446Y1) [26L]

Europe is a, landmass and a (transnational) collection of people – in both cases rather vaguely defined. Europe is also an idea, one often closely associated with “western civilization”. So if anthropology is a combination of the ethnographic study of a place and its people, and also the critical study of a culture, then certainly both of these perspectives could usefully be applied to a course on Europe. Both of these dimensions are also of pressing concern to within Europe today.

Exclusion: ANT 446Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT447H1
Aboriginal Australia [26S]

The course investigates the nature and significance, in history and the history of ideas, of the ways of life of the Australian Aborigines. The emphasis is on the influence of religion and music on the economic, political and social organization of the people.
Prerequisite: ANT367Y1/permission of the instructor


ANT448H1
Ethnicity & Nationalism [26S]

An examination of theories and critique of ethnicity and nationalism from an anthropological perspective. The problem of the cultural context of ethnicity. Case studies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1, one 300-level course in Social Cultural or Linguistic Anthropology


ANT450H1
Anthropological Approaches to Environmentalism [26S]

Comparative examination of human ecological adaptations, livelihood strategies, spiritual and cultural values and their relation to environmental maintenance or degradation. Explores contemporary “grass roots” environmental movements and ideologies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1, a 300-level or above Social Cultural Anthropology course


ANT452H1
Anthropology & Human Rights [26S]

The concept of human rights in its universal claims rises fundamental questions for anthropology as it challenges a central value of the discipline: cultural relativism. Students are asked to consider epistemological and theoretical questions and case studies (e.g. claims of rights by ethnic collectivities).
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1, one 300 level social-cultural/linguistic ANT course


ANT454H1
The Anthropology of Music & Art (formerly ANT360Y1) [26S]

This course investigates the connection between religion, music and society from an anthropological point of view. The primary focus is on societies where music is seen by people as the principal vehicle for religious expression. Examination of religions and musics of Australian aboriginal, Melanesian, Native North America, African societies, others.
Prerequisite: ANT367Y1

Exclusion: ANT360Y1


ANT455Y1
International Health: Anthropological Perspectives [52L]

This course examines international health, focusing on the health problems of “third world” populations and the contributions and critiques provided by medical anthropology. Topics include: the political ecology of infectious disease, disease eradication campaigns, population policy and reproductive health, the AIDS pandemic, and the quest for culturally appropriate interventions.
Prerequisite: ANT348H1


ANT456H1
Sexuality, Culture and Movement [26L]

This course explores, first, how and where forms of desire and sexual practice have become sites of anthropological inquiry and exemplars of particular cultural logics. Tracing, then, the “transnational turn” in the anthropology of sexuality, the course engages important debates about culture, locality, and globalization. By focusing on the transnational movement of desires, practices, and pleasures through activisms, mass media, and tourism, the course asks how sex is global and how globalization is thoroughly sexed. Course material will stress, but not be limited to, forms of same-sex or otherwise “queer” sexualities.

Exclusion: ANT343H1/Y1
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 plus any 300-level course in Social-Cultural or Linguistic Anthropology
This is a Social Science course.


ANT459H1
Maps and Places [26L]

A study of the cross-cultural meaning of two-dimensional representations of space and the socio-political relevance of place.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT460H1
Global Perspectives on Women’s Health [26S]

This fourth-year seminar examines how female gender shapes health and illness. Using case studies of sexual health, fertility and its management, substance use/abuse, mental health, and occupational/labor health risks, the course investigates the material, political, and socio-cultural factors that can put women at risk for a range of illness conditions.
Prerequisite: ANT343H1/ANT348H1


ANT461Y1
The History of Anthropology        and the Limits of Theory [52L]

History and development of theories which underlie contemporary anthropology.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1


ANT462H1
Anthropology and the Intimate: Studies in Affect and Action [26S]

This course examines how anthropologists have studied the way that people hope, imagine, love, and despise. Ethnography of “the intimate” realms of affect raises important questions about knowledge production and methodology as well as offering insight into how people come to act upon the world and what the human consequences of such action are. The course will also examine how “the intimate” is socially produced and harnessed in the service of politics and culture. Topics will include grief and its lack; dreams and activism; love and social change; memory and imperialism; sexuality and care; and violence and hope.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 plus any 300-level course in Social-Cultural or Linguistic Anthropology


ANT463H1
Native Rights, Canadian Law [26S]

Drawing on ethnographies, anthropological theories of social change and case law, the course will explore recent Canadian legal decisions dealing with Native issues and review how the Indigenous argument for Aboriginal difference (land and treaty rights, customary law, self-governance) is shaped in legal contexts and affects changes to the practice of Aboriginality in Canada.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1
Recommended Preparation: ANT365H1


ANT464H1
Anthropology of Oral History and Narrative [26S]

This course reviews the issues in theory and practice of oral history and narratives, examining the multiple forms of oral evidence, its reliability, and strategies for compilation and analysis of oral data. One important component of the course will be the conducting of interviews.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 and one other anthropology course from Group D


ANT465H1
Anthropology of Subjectivity [26S]

This course explores themes such as the emergence of political and religious imaginaries; the relationship between anthropology and psychoanalysis; anthropology of transnational and diasporic subjectivity; affect and violence; subjectivity and the state.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 and at least one other 300+ social-cultural anthropology course


ANT466H1
The Philippines and the Filipino Diaspora [26S]

This seminar studies the Philippines and in the Filipino diaspora. It draws on anthropological, historical, and literary perspectives on culture and social practices, with an eye to considering the ways “the Philippines” as an object of inquiry is differently understood in a real/anthropological studies, feminist, North American ethnic studies and transnational studies.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1or permission of instructor


ANT471H1
Human Nutritional Ecology [26S]

Approaches from various sub-fields within anthropology are combined with others from zoology, ecology, community nutrition, and global health to enrich our understanding of the evolved nutritional needs of humans across time and space and their changing relationship to culture. Through intensive reading and discussion of a wide range of recent primary research articles, we explore ways in which the study of foodways, food systems, and human ecology can help us design better strategies for improving health in different settings.
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1/ANT204Y1
This is a Social Science or Science course.


ANT480H1
Special Topics in Anthropological Research [26S]

Unique opportunity to explore a particular anthropological topic in-depth. Topics vary from year to year.
Prerequisite: A 200+ level ANT course


ARH482H1
Special Topics in Archaeology [26S]

See Archaeology
Unique opportunity to explore a particular archaeological topic in-depth. Topics vary from year to year.
Prerequisite: A 200+ level ANT course


ANT483H1
Special Topics in Linguistic Anthropology [26S]

This course will focus on an advanced topic in Linguistic Anthropology. Topic will vary from year- to-year.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1/ANT253H1/300 Level course in Linguistic and Semiotic anthropology


ANT490Y1
Field Course in Social and Cultural Anthropology [26L, 52P]

An instructor-supervised experiential study project in social and cultural anthropology. Course takes place in an off-campus setting.
Prerequisite: ANT204Y1 and two additional social-cultural anthropology courses


ANT497Y1
Independent Research [TBA]


ANT498H1
Independent Research [TBA]


ANT499H1
Independent Research [TBA]

Supervised independent research on a topic agreed on by the student and supervisor before enrolment in the course. Open in exceptional circumstances to advanced students with a strong background in Anthropology. Course Supervisor must be a member of the Anthropology faculty. Application for enrolment should be made to the Department in the preceding term. A maximum of one year of Independent Research courses is allowed per program.
Prerequisite: A minimum of 10 credits, permission of Supervisor and Undergraduate Coordinator.
Anthropology Science Courses

Key to Course Descriptions

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ANT203Y1
Human Biology & Evolution [52L, 26P]

Introduction to Biological Anthropology, investigating various lines of evidence for human evolution including our primate relatives and an exploration of the relevance of human origins to contemporary human biology and variability.
Recommended preparation: ANT100Y1/BIO150Y1BIO150Y1


JPA305H1
Introduction to Archaeometry [26L, 13P]

Introduction to methods for remote sensing of buried archaeological remains, dating, and analysis of ancient materials. Application of methods and interpretation of results in archaeological contexts. (Offered in alternate years) (Given by the Departments of Physics and Anthropology)

Exclusion: JPA300Y1


JPA310H1
Physics and Archaeology        [26L, 13P]

Introduction to the principles behind archaeometric methods for remote sensing, dating, and analysis of archaeological materials, and interpretation of results. Offered in conjunction with JPA305H1. (Offered in alternate years) (Given by the Departments of Physics and Anthropology)

Exclusion: JPA300Y1
Prerequisite: Any 1st-year Physics course/permission of instructor
Co-requisite: JPA305H1


ANT326Y1
Human Evolutionary Anatomy (formerly ANT 332Y1) [26L, 39P]

A detailed examination of human musculo-skeletal anatomy from the comparative and evolutionary perspectives. Allometry, basic biomechanics, functional anatomy, and the structure and function of human mastication, the brain, the forelimb and bipedalism. Labs make use of the large collection of primate skeletal material and fossil human casts.

Exclusion: ANT332Y1
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1


ANT330Y1
Paleoanthropology Field School        (Offered on an irregular basis) [26L, 78P]

This course provides background in the practical and theoretical aspects of fieldwork in Paleoanthropology. Students are trained in the treatment and analysis of fossil vertebrates, plant macro- and micro-fossils and sediments. Excursions to paleoanthropological localities of Homo erectus and Homo sapiens, and excavation at a hominoid site. (Joint undergraduate-graduate)
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1


ANT333Y1
Living Primate Adaptations [52L, 26P]

A survey of living primates, this lab-oriented course describes and compares the diverse behavioural and anatomical adaptations that are characteristic to this order of mammals. The understanding of the biological diversity and evolutionary history of primates is important for further understanding of human adaptation and evolution.

Exclusion: ANT333H1
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1
Recommended preparation: ANT326Y1, ANT334Y1; BIO150Y1BIO150Y1


ANT334Y1
Human Skeletal Biology [39L, 39P]

Exploration of the development and maintenance of the human skeleton and dentition, with emphasis on application to archaeological, forensic and biomedical sciences.
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1


JPA400Y1
Advanced Physics & Archaeology [156P]

An introduction to research in archaeometry and archaeological prospecting. Possible projects: magnetic and resistivity surveying of archaeological sites; thermoluminescence measurements; neutron activation analysis and x-ray fluorescence analysis of artifacts; radiocarbon dating by atom counting; lead isotope analysis. (Offered in alternate years) (Given by the Departments of Physics and Anthropology)
Prerequisite: JPA300Y1/(JPA305H1, JPA310H1)
ANT415Y1 Laboratory in Faunal Archaeo-Osteology [52S, 52P]
Examination and interpretation of faunal material from archaeological sites as evidence for culture.
Prerequisite: ARH312Y1


ANT429H1
Palaeoanthropology        (formerly ANT429Y1) [26L, 52P]

Method and theory in paleoanthropology focusing on reconstructions of human evolutionary history and the behaviou r of fossil hominids. Identification and analysis of fossil human material and hominid systematics. Includes an extensive lab component using a large collection of primate skeletons and fossil human casts.

Exclusion: ANT429Y1, ANT 332Y5 (University of Toronto Mississauga), ANTC17H3 (Scarb)
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1, ANT326Y1


ANT430H1
Primate Conservation Biology [26L]

The focus of this course is on the science of primate conservation biology in an anthropological context. Topics will include primate biodiversity and biogeography, human impacts, and conservation strategies/policies. The effects of cultural and political considerations on primate conservation will also be discussed.
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1
ANT431H1 Mortuary Practices in the Archaeological Record [26L]
Death is the only rite of passage that leaves frequent archaeological traces, through burial and mortuary rituals. It provides us with a rare opportunity to move beyond material culture and look into the cognitive, ritual and ideological aspects of a past human group, bringing archaeology closer to addressing anthropological questions. As we learn how to examine cultural identity, represented through burial and ancestral ritual, and biological reality of demographic, occupational and pathological conditions, the course will provide students with an understanding of the interpretative potential of the human skeleton as a central feature of any burial. The course is of interest to archaeological and biological anthropology students but is not limited to these two fields.
Prerequisite: Any 300-level course from Group A or C
This is a Social Science or Science course.


ANT434H1
Health, Diet & Disease in the Past [26L, 13P]

Advanced exploration of the life histories of past populations, through the application of palaeodietary analyses, palaeopathology and other appropriate research methods.
Prerequisite: ANT334Y1


ANT436H1
Primate Ecology & Social Behavior [26L]

This course will provide an overview of the ecology and social behavior of extant nonhuman primates. Topics will include socioecology, conservation biology, biogeography, aggression and affiliation, community ecology, communication, and socio-sexual behavior. There will also be extensive discussions of methods used in collecting data on primates in the field.
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1
ANT471H1 Human Nutritional Ecology [26S]
Approaches from various sub-fields within anthropology are combined with others from zoology, ecology, community nutrition, and global health to enrich our understanding of the evolved nutritional needs of humans across time and space and their changing relationship to culture. Through intensive reading and discussion of a wide range of recent primary research articles, we explore ways in which the study of foodways, food systems, and human ecology can help us design better strategies for improving health in different settings.
Prerequisite: ANT203Y1/ANT204Y1
This is a Social Science or Science course.


ANT481H1
Special Topics in Biological Anthropology [26S]

Unique opportunity to explore in-depth a particular topic in Biological Anthropology. Topics vary from year to year.
Prerequisite: A 200+ level ANT course