Anthropology 117 - Building a Better World

Fall
2020
01
4.00
Vanessa Fong
MW 02:10PM-03:30PM
Amherst College
ANTH-117-01-2021F
ONLI ONLI
vfong@amherst.edu

How can anthropological perspectives help us understand the intended and unintended consequences of our efforts to build a better world? This course will address this question by looking at anthropological studies of the implementation and consequences of large-scale, deeply transformative policies and practices intended to improve people’s lives, solve current problems, and prevent future catastrophes. We will focus especially on comparisons between China and the United States, which have two of the world’s largest and most influential economies and face many similar problems, but have developed very different approaches to trying to build a better world. We will evaluate current proposals for transformative new policies and practices, and consider how efforts to build a better world might benefit from anthropologists’ ability to look holistically at relationships between personal experiences, psychology, cultural norms, social structures, philosophy, laws, history, politics, economics, biology, technology, environmental issues, global systems, and international relations. Students will learn to draw on anthropological perspectives as they develop and write about their own ideas for building a better world and about consequences those ideas might have.

Limited to 19 students. Five seats are reserved for first-year students. Admission with consent of the instructor. Fall semester. Professor Fong.

Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.