Description
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This advanced seminar course critically examines theories and practices of racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism. We will evaluate both anthropological and wider social theoretical literatures to investigate their contributions and limitations to understanding these historically and conceptually interlinked problematics across different times and spaces.Ìý
Learning outcomes (UG):Ìý
Upon completion of the module students will be able to identify and critically evaluate a range of major social theoretical approaches to, and everyday cultural understandings of, racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism. Students will gain knowledge of the history of major theoretical perspectives on these topics both within and beyond the discipline of anthropology and be able to identify and critically assess the contributions and limitations of a range of leading approaches. Students will be able to critically explore anthropological analyses of the discourses, practices and institutions mediating racism and racialization across different cultural and historical times and spaces. Students will have developed their skills in approaching academic texts in a critically engaged way, in formulating analytic questions, in constructing convincing argumentation, in writing academic critique, and in taking great control over their own learning. They will also develop their critical understanding of the perspectival grounding of knowledge.Ìý
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Teaching Delivery (UG)Ìý
This module is structured upon a weekly two-hour lecture and one-hour discussion session in a tutorial groupÌý
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Learning Outcomes (PG)Ìý
Upon completion of the module students will be able to identify and critically evaluate the major social theoretical approaches to racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism. Students will gain knowledge of the history of major theoretical perspectives on these topics both within and beyond the discipline of anthropology and a critical awareness of the contributions and limitations of current research and advanced scholarship within anthropology. Students will have developed their skills in demonstrating originality in their assessment and application of the major contributions to the anthropology of racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism, including the critical assessment of the methodologies employed by the leading approaches.Ìý
Teaching Delivery (PG)
This module is structured upon attendance of a weekly two-hour lecture and two-hour discussion-based seminar led by the course instructorÌýÌý
Additional information:
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This module includes tasks which provide feedback offering guidance on the intellectual and ethnographic content expected from students. These formative assessments do not contribute to the final grade.Ìý
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Attendance at the weekly two-hour lecture is not mandatory for Post Graduate students but is strongly recommended.Ìý
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This module utilises Critical Pedagogy as Praxis, and when possible, includes an off-site open classroom session.Ìý
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Each week students will be encouraged to undertake independent readings on current issues and ethnographic material that builds upon the theoretical concepts being learnt. The expectation is that this will enable an active discussion of key issues, with the opportunity to develop a practical understanding of the subject by sharing and critically analysing concepts both orally and in writing.Ìý
Module Aims
This module will enable you to develop your analytical thinking, critical reading, writing and listening skills; as well as your skills in discussing academic texts and concepts including formulating critically informed questions. The course will introduce you to various social theoretical approaches to racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism as developed within anthropology (including semiotic, performative and deconstructive approaches). The course will allow you to critically compare both the contributions and the limitations of various social theoretical positions to our understanding of racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism, as well as situate and contrast different conceptions of these categories across various historical times and spaces. The course will thus allow you to unpack the cultural presuppositions embedded in both popular and academic discourses on racism, racialization, ethnicity, and nationalism throughout contemporary socio-political contexts.Ìý
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
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