Year 1
In your first year, you will receive a thorough grounding in the theory and practice of anthropology in the broadest sense, addressing the core disciplines of social and biological anthropology as well as interdisciplinary perspectives on culture, society, and health. Currently, students take five modules in Anthropology and select one elective module offered by another department, including the option to study a module in a modern foreign language.
Compulsory modules:
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Peoples and Cultures
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Human Evolution and Diversity
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Being Human: An introduction to the history and practice of Anthropology
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Doing Anthropological Research
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Health, Illness, and Society.
Year 2
In your second year, you will develop a deeper and more complex grasp of the anthropology of health and continue to gain "hands-on" experience of conducting research through a series of regional field trips and activities that form our Anthropological Research Methods in Action module. You will also begin preparation for your dissertation through modules that are designed to support you to follow either a more social or biological pathway as you design your own research project, in addition to a core module that will help you develop plans for your dissertation and prepare to do your own research. You will also take two elective modules that will enable you to pursue your interests in specific topics from the wider anthropological discipline.
Compulsory modules:
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Anthropological Research Methods in Action
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Research Project Design
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Global Health and Disease
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Sex, Reproduction and Love
And one of the following modules:
Examples of optional modules:
Year 3 (Year 4 if undertaking a Year Abroad)
In your final year, you will design and carry out your own dissertation project and take part in our Anthropology Field Course Module. The Field Course usually takes place in September prior to your final year and offers an intensive two-week fieldwork experience at one of the department’s residential field schools. You have a choice of up to 6 advanced optional taught modules, and you can take an elective option from another department if you wish.
Optional modules are generally based on the research expertise of staff, and reflect the University’s ideal of research-led education. Options available in the Department cover the full disciplinary spectrum, from the entirely biological to the entirely socio-cultural, or a mixture of anthropological sub-disciplines. Options change slightly from year-to-year, with a minimum of 18 different options to choose from every year.
Throughout your degree you are also invited to attend the regular round of departmental research seminars given by visiting scholars or Durham-based researchers, and can participate in a key forum for current innovative research.
Core module:
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Dissertation
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Field School Module
Examples of optional modules:
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Anthropology of Tobacco
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Anthropology of Health Inequality
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Anthropology of Physical Activity and Health
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Decolonising Anthropology
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Evolutionary Medicine: Maternal and Infant Health
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Human Reproductive Ecology
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Development, Conflict and Crisis in the Lower Omo
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Poison, Pollution and the Chemical Anthropocene
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Exhibiting Anthropology
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Capitalism in Ruins
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Social Anthropology of Hormones
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Anthropology of Ethics and Morality
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Anthropology of Sport
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Anthropological Skills for Climate Change Survival
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Power and Governance
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Violence and Memory
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Evolution of Cooperation
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Comparative Cognition and Culture
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Cultural Evolution of Music
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Technological Primates
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Primates in Peril
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Primates, Predators and the Ecology of Fear
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Homo narrans: Evolutionary Anthropology of Fiction
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Forensic Anthropology
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Palaeoanthropology and Palaeoecology
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Anthropology in the Contemporary Middle East
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Anthropology, Art, and Experience