Anthropology 491E - S- Queer Ethnographies

Spring
2021
01
3.00
Svati Shah
TU TH 11:30AM 12:45PM
UMass Amherst
84166
Fully Remote Class
svatipshah@umass.edu
84257,85073
Ethnography, the signal methodology of anthropology, is now a widespread research method, taken up by scholars across disciplines seeking to understand social processes in everyday life. Queer scholars in the United States pioneered the use of ethnographic methods within the US, arguing that queer communities constituted 'subcultures' that should be studied in their own right. This course begins with these earlier works, from the 1970s and 1980s, and will quickly move to a survey of contemporary queer ethnographic work. The course will end with a consideration of ethnographic film that addresses the everyday lives of LGBTQI people and movements from around the world. Students will come away from the course with a better understanding of the theoretical critiques that ethnography makes available for scholars of sexuality and gender, and of the history of ethnography within anthropology.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.