Anthropology 224 - Anthropos in the Anthropocene: Human-Environment Relations in a Time of Ecological Crisis
Anthropos in the Anthropocene
Fall
2023
01
4.00
Colin B. Hoag
M W 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM
Smith College
ANT-224-01-202401
Seelye 312
choag@smith.edu
ENV 224-01, ANT 224-01
Offered as ANT 224 and ENV 224. Anthropology seeks to understand human life in all its complexity, but what constitutes the human is far from straightforward. This course examines the changing ways that Anthropos is being understood in an era of rapid global climate change and our planet’s sixth mass extinction event, both driven by human activities. We review perspectives on the relationship between humans and their environment from various cultural perspectives, considering how they engage notions of race, class, and gender, and what they imply for nature conservation. Topics include modernity, pets, cyborgs, kinship, symbiosis, extinction, species invasions, settler colonialism and the Anthropocene concept. Enrollment limited to 30.