Anthropology 324 - Cultures of Money

Fall
2016
01
4.00
Nusrat Chowdhury
MW 12:30PM-01:50PM
Amherst College
ANTH-324-01-1617F
CLAR 100
nchowdhury@amherst.edu

This course explores money as an ethnographic object.  It focuses on anthropological writing about the everyday uses of money from “exotic” fields to places much closer to “home,"  from colonial encounters to household budgeting and the world of finance, for example. Anthropology has long been interested in the diverse ways in which people attach meanings, desires, and value to the idea that is money. If modern money is a universally recognized object of value, what can the histories and cultures of its circulation say about the making of the contemporary world? The course answers the question by approaching money not simply as equal and interchangeable as it is generally understood, but full of cultural significance.  Together we will see how money is a powerful medium through which one can understand important social and cultural phenomena, such as morality, violence, faith, gender, power, and resistance.


Limited to 25 students.  Fall semester.  Professor Chowdhury.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.