2010-2011 Undergraduate Catalog

Idaho State University Undergraduate Catalog 2010-2011


Department of Anthropology

Chair and Professor: Lohse
Research Professor: Maschner
Professors:  Holmer, Loether
Associate Professor:  Cartwright
Assistant Professors: Dudgeon, Peterson, Reedy-Maschner
Native Language Instructor: Gould
Assistant Lecturers: Petersen, Thomas
Research Affiliate Faculty:  Dean, Hansen, Woods
Emeritus: Stocks

See Faculty Information   
See Department Web Page   
See Introductory Information   
See Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology   
See Minors   
See Courses   

Mission

The mission of the Department of Anthropology is to research and teach about humankind the world over from the distant past to the present. Anthropology consists of subfields that specialize in the human past, human biology and evolution, language, society, and culture, and provides cross-cultural, environmental, international, and global perspectives on past and present human behavior. At Idaho State University, an important part of the anthropology mission is to apply anthropological concepts to the resolution of important social, cultural, and environmental problems of our times. The Department of Anthropology offers courses leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree and the Master of Arts or Master of Science degrees in Anthropology. For a full description of the M.A. and M.S. degrees, refer to the Graduate Catalog. The Anthropology major provides training in all four subdisciplines in the field, including archaeology, biological anthropology, anthropological linguistics, and sociocultural anthropology. The department also offers minors in Anthropology, American Indian Studies, Latino Studies, and Linguistics, and opportunities for specialization in archaeological science; ecological, medical, and applied anthropology; language preservation; biocomplexity; informatics; and oral history.

Undergraduate Learning Objectives And Outcomes

Program Objectives – Students who have completed an undergraduate major in Anthropology at Idaho State University should be able to:

  1. Understand basic methods, concepts, alternative theories and approaches, and modes of explanation appropriate to each of the subfields of the discipline
  2. Read and understand anthropological theory at the level of Bachelor of Arts.
  3. Understand the use of quantitative and qualitative analysis in anthropological research.
  4. Understand a comparative approach to the human condition, both cross-culturally and chronologically.
  5. Demonstrate technical writing skills at the level of Bachelor of Arts.
Learning Outcomes – Students in the Senior Seminar will demonstrate the following competencies based on the above objectives:
  1. Apply knowledge of anthropological methods, approaches, and modes of explanation to contemporary social issues.
  2. Use theory to formulate a testable explanation for a given cultural behavior.
  3. Select and perform quantitative and qualitative analytical techniques at a basic level.
  4. Carry out a research project using cross-cultural or diachronic (or combination of the two) comparative methods.
  5. Write a competent senior research project.



Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology

Beyond the general university requirements, a student seeking Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in anthropology must complete at least 48 credits in the following curriculum, earning at least a C grade in all lower and upper division core courses.

Required Lower Division Courses:

ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107 The Nature of Language            3 cr
ANTH 2203       Introduction to Archaeology           3 cr
ANTH 2205       Introduction to Archaeology Lab       1 cr
ANTH 2230       Introduction to Biological
                  Anthropology                        3 cr
ANTH 2232       Introduction to Biological
                  Anthropology Laboratory             1 cr
ANTH 2250       Introduction to Sociocultural
                  Anthropology                        3 cr
ANTH 2237       Peoples and Cultures of the Old World 3 cr
           OR
ANTH 2238       Peoples and Cultures of the New World 3 cr
OR
ANTH 2239 Latino Peoples and Cultures 3 cr
                                              TOTAL: 17 cr
Required Upper Division Courses:
ANTH 4401       History and Theory of
                  Sociocultural Anthropology          3 cr
ANTH 4403       Method and Theory in Archaeology      3 cr
ANTH 4430       Human Origins and Diversity           3 cr
ANTH 4450       Introduction to Socio-linguistic
                  Anthropology                        3 cr
           OR
ANTH 4455       Linguistic Analysis I                 3 cr
           OR
ANTH 4458       Historical Linguistics                3 cr
ANTH 4492       Senior Seminar                        3 cr
ANTH 4495 Department Colloquium 1 cr
                                              TOTAL: 16 cr

IN ADDITION:    Upper Division Anthropology
                  Elective Courses                    9 cr
ENGL 3307       Professional and Technical Writing    3 cr
MATH 1153       Introduction to Statistics            3 cr
                                              TOTAL: 15 cr




Minors in the Department of Anthropology include the following
American Indian Studies
Anthropology
Latino Studies
Linguistics



Minor in American Indian Studies

Required Courses
ANTH 1100       General Anthropology                  3 cr
ANTH 2238       People and Cultures of the New World  3 cr
ANTH 4466       Current Issues in Indian Country      3 cr
ANTH 4476       Seminar in American Indian Studies    3 cr
                                              TOTAL: 12 cr

Plus ONE of the following courses:
ANTH/HIST 2258 Native American History 3 cr
ANTH 4421 Federal Indian Relations 3 cr
ANTH 4452       American Indian Verbal Arts           3 cr
ANTH 4454       Survey of American Indian Languages   3 cr
Approved American Indian Language course              3 cr

IN ADDITION:    Approved American Indian     
                  Studies courses                     6 cr
                                              TOTAL: 21 cr


Minor in Anthropology

Required Courses
ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107 The Nature of Language		3 cr
ANTH 2203 Introduction to Archaeology 3 cr
ANTH 2205       Introduction to Archaeology Lab 1 cr
ANTH 2230       Introduction to Biological
                  Anthropology 3 cr
ANTH 2232       Introduction to Biological
                  Anthropology Laboratory 1 cr
ANTH 2250       Introduction to
                  Sociocultural Anthropology 3 cr
IN ADDITION: Upper Division Anthropology Courses 9 cr
TOTAL: 23 cr



Minor in Latino Studies

Required Courses
ANTH 2250	Introduction to
Sociocultural Anthropology 3 cr
ANTH 2239       Contemporary Latinos in the U.S. 3 cr

           OR
ANTH 2239       Peoples of Mexico Through Film 3 cr
           OR
ANTH 2239       Culture South of the Border 3 cr
HIST 2251       Latin America 3 cr

One year intermediate Spanish:

SPAN 2201, 2202	Intermediate Spanish			8 cr
OR
SPAN 3301, 3302 Spanish Conversation and Composition 8 cr
OR
Other with permission of Latino Studies Director 6 cr

Plus 6 credits from the following for a total of at least 21 credits
(3 credits must be 400 level or above):

ANTH 1108       Spanish for Health Care Providers     1 cr
ANTH 2239       Contemporary Latinos in the U.S.      3 cr
ANTH 2239       Peoples of Mexico Through Film        3 cr
ANTH 2239       Culture South of the Border           3 cr
ANTH 2239       Ancient Meso America                  3 cr
ANTH 2239       Other approved classes
ANTH 4424       Ethnomedicine of Latin America        3 cr
ANTH 4487       Ethnographic Fieldschool*           3-6 cr
ANTH 4489       Latin American Indigenous
                  Resource management                 3 cr
HIST 4460       The Global Hispanic Monarchy          3 cr
HIST 4450       Golden Age Castile                    3 cr
SPAN 3342       Survey of Latin American
                  Literature and Civilization         3 cr
SPAN 4462       Early Twentieth Century
                  Spanish American Literature         3 cr
*When offered in Mexico, Guatemala and other Latin American countries

Minor in Linguistics

Required Courses
ANTH/LANG/ENGL 1107            
                Nature of Language                    3 cr
ENGL 2281       Introduction to Language Studies      3 cr
ANTH/LANG 4455  Introduction to Phonetics             3 cr
           OR
ENGL 4485       Linguistic Analysis
           OR
PHIL 4410       Philosophy of Language
One year of a foreign language*                       8 cr
Plus 9 credits from the following, for a total of 26 credits:
ANTH/ENGL 3367  Language in the United States         3 cr
ANTH 4450       Introduction to Socio-linguistics     3 cr
ANTH 4452       Survey of American Indian Languages   3 cr
ANTH/LANG 4455  Introduction to Phonetics             3 cr
ANTH/LANG 4456  Phonology and Morphology              3 cr
ANTH 4458       Historical Linguistics                3 cr
ANTH 4459       Linguistic Field Methods              3 cr
ANTH/LANG 4457  Survey of Indo-European Languages     3 cr
ANTH/ENGL/LANG 4484
                Topics in Linguistics                 3 cr
ENGL 2280       Grammar and Usage                     3 cr
ENGL 4481       Advanced Grammar                      3 cr
ENGL 4483       Varieties of American English         3 cr
ENGL 4485       Linguistic Analysis                   3 cr
ENGL 4486       Old English                           3 cr
ENGL 4487       History of the English Language       3 cr
LANG 4488       Comparative Philology                 3 cr
PHIL 2301       Introduction to Logic                 3 cr
PHIL 4410       Philosophy of Language                3 cr

*in addition to the 8 credit hours of foreign language required under General Education Goal 10B.


Anthropology Courses

Only Juniors and Seniors may register for 4000-level courses without permission of the instructor.

ANTH 1100 General Anthropology 3 credits. Introduction to fields of anthropology: physical anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, and ethnology, and to biological and cultural development of humans. Satisfies Goal 12 of the General Education Requirements. F, S, Su

ANTH 1101 Elementary Shoshoni I 4 credits. Basic communication skills and grammar of Shoshoni and introduction to Shoshoni culture. Cross-listed as SHOS 1101. With ANTH/SHOS 1102, satisfies Goal 10B of the General Education Requirements. F

ANTH 1102 Elementary Shoshoni II 4 credits. Furthering basic communication skills and grammar of Shoshoni and introduction to Shoshoni culture. Cross-listed as SHOS 1102. PREREQ: ANTH/SHOS 1101 or equivalent. With ANTH/SHOS 1101, satisfies Goal 10B of the General Education Requirements. S

ANTH 1107 Nature of Language 3 credits. General survey of structure and use of language. Topics include language origins, descriptive and historical linguistics, language and culture, and history of the English language. Cross-listed as ENGL 1107 and LANG 1107. S

ANTH 2201 Intermediate Shoshoni I 4 credits. Intermediate communication skills and grammar of Shoshoni. Deepens understanding of Shoshoni culture and builds on skills and knowledge gained in Elementary Shoshoni. Cross-listed as SHOS 2201. PREREQ: ANTH/SHOS 1102 or equivalent.  With ANTH/SHOS 2202, satisfies Goal 10B of the General Education Requirements. F

ANTH 2202 Intermediate Shoshoni II 4 credits. Intermediate communication skills and grammar of Shoshoni. Deepens understanding of Shoshoni culture and builds on skills and knowledge gained in Elementary Shoshoni. Cross‑listed as SHOS 2202. PREREQ: ANTH/SHOS 2201 or equivalent. With ANTH/SHOS 2201, satisfies Goal 10B of the General Education Requirements. S

ANTH 2203 Introduction to Archaeology 3 credits. Introduction to basic methods, data and concepts of archaeology. S

ANTH 2205 Introduction to Archaeology Laboratory 1 credit. Exercises and experiments introducing the methods and techniques of archaeology. COREQ: ANTH 2203. S

ANTH 2206 Indigenous Traditional Parenting 3 credits. Using the traditional knowledge of a Shoshoni language speaker, course is based in language and philosophy. Includes concepts of personhood, relations between parent and child, and the philosophy and use of childcare artifacts such as cradleboards. F

ANTH 2210 Conversational Shoshoni 3 credits.  Refresher in Shoshoni words and phrases for those with previous exposure to the language and culture. S

ANTH 2212 Introduction to Folklore/Oral Tradition 3 credits. Folklore genres and folk groups, including introductory experience in folklore fieldwork focused on study of a genre or group of genres within verbal, customary, or material culture. Cross-listed as ENGL 2212. R1

ANTH 2215 Anthropology of Gender 3 credits. Human behavior, social and biological differences in the context of various cultures and stratification systems. D

ANTH 2230 Introduction to Biological Anthropology 3 credits. Introduction to human biology, including human origins, evolution, human adaptation, and diversity. F

ANTH 2232 Introduction to Biological Anthropology Laboratory 1 credit. Introduction to methodologies and techniques in biological anthropology. COREQ: ANTH 2230. F

ANTH 2237 Peoples and Cultures of the Old World 3 credits. Examination of human social and cultural diversity from different parts of the Old World. Topics include social structure, ecology, religion, politics, and language. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. Satisfies Goal 10A of the General Education Requirements. D

ANTH 2238 Peoples and Cultures of the New World 3 credits. Examination of the human social and cultural diversity from different parts of the New World. Topics include social structure, ecology, religion, politics, and language. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. Satisfies Goal 10A of the General Education Requirements. F, S

ANTH 2239 Latino Peoples and Cultures 3 credits. Examination of the human, social and cultural diversity among Latino people in different regions of the world.  Topics include ethnicity, health and healing, social structure, ecology, religion, politics, prehistory and language.  May be repeated for up to 6 credits.  Satisfies Goal 10A of the General Education Requirements. F, S

ANTH 2250 Introduction to Sociocultural Anthropology 3 credits. Explores cultural and biocultural behavior including cross cultural examination of enculturation, culture and personality, social organization, kinship and marriage, economics, politics, and ideology. Focus on cultural dynamics and contemporary issues in cultural anthropology. F

ANTH 2258 Native American History 3 credits. Assesses diversity of North American natives, their life and thought; European impact; federal policy; and natives' response to continual cultural and physical assault. Cross-listed as HIST 2258. D

ANTH 3301 Introduction to Shoshoni Folklore 3 credits. Survey of Shoshoni beliefs, customs, music, dance and various genres of oral tradition including tales, legends and myths. Includes the material manifestations of Shoshoni culture, including arts and crafts, costuming and folk technology. R1

ANTH 3367 Language in the United States 3 credits. A survey of the languages of the United States (American Indian languages, immigrant languages, and ethnic and regional varieties of English) along with the social and political aspects of American language use. Cross-listed as ENGL 3367. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107. D

ANTH 4401 History and Theory of Sociocultural Anthropology 3 credits. Survey of the development of anthropology, various schools of thought, important personalities, and concepts that have contributed to anthropology over time. PREREQ: ANTH 2250 or permission of instructor. S

ANTH 4402 Ecological Anthropology 3 credits. Interaction of human biocultural systems and environment. Relations of natural resources, technological inventories, social organization, cultural categories. Native resource management practices. PREREQ: ANTH 2203, ANTH 2250, ANTH 2230, BIOL 1100 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4403 Method and Theory in Archaeology 3 credits. History of the development of current methods and theory in archaeology and contemporary applications. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. F

ANTH 4404 Material Culture Analysis 3 credits. Methods and analyses used in archaeology and anthropology to understand the relationship between objects and culture. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. COREQ: ANTH 4405. D

ANTH 4405 Analytical Techniques Laboratory 1 credit. Analytical techniques laboratory to accompany ANTH 4404. Students will complete an assigned project in material culture analysis. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. COREQ: ANTH 4404. D

ANTH 4406 American Indian Health Issues 3 credits. An overview of health concerns, both current and past, of American Indian people, and the biological and sociocultural factors which influence health status. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4407 Anthropology of Global Health  3 credits. How cultures define health and illness, and how these definitions ultimately influence the health status of individuals. PREREQ: Prior Anthropology course or permission of instructor. F

ANTH 4408 Special Topics in Medical Anthropology 3 credits. Rotating topics, including international health issues, ethno-psychiatry, ethnomedicine and non-western healing systems. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. S

ANTH 4409 Clinical Medical Anthropology 3 credits. Explores the culture of biomedicine and the beliefs of patients. Topics include doctor/patient communication, cultural competency, cultural construction of risk, critiques of high-tech medicine and the international pharmaceutical industry. S

ANTH 4410 Introduction to Cultural Resources Management 3 credits. Introduction to CRM reviewing historic preservation and federal legislation as they pertain to archaeology; practical experience in site survey and recording. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. D, W

ANTH 4413 Old World Archaeology 3 credits. Prehistory of the Old World. Precise areal focus and periods may vary. Includes both theory and exposition. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4414 New World Archaeology 3 credits. Examination of the prehistory of the Americas with emphasis on the North American Continent. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4423 Anthropology of International Health 3 credits. Exploration of critical health issues that exist in the world today from an anthropological perspective. Diseases of poverty/development, emerging infectious diseases, medical tourism and the political arena of international health programs. S

ANTH 4424 Ethnomedicine of Latin America 3 credits. Examines traditional medical systems and folk illnesses in order to better understand the underlying logics of healing that exist in Latino populations worldwide. Shamanism, witchcraft, spiritual healing and biomedicine will be addressed. F

ANTH 4430 Human Origins and Diversity 3 credits. Examines human origins, adaptations and biological diversity within the context of evolutionary processes. PREREQ: ANTH 2230 or permission of instructor. S

ANTH 4432 Human Osteology 3 credits. Provides a working knowledge of skeletal anatomy, primarily focusing on identification of individual bones. Other topics include: osteogenesis, pathologies, and applications of knowledge and techniques. PREREQ: ANTH 2230 and ANTH 2232 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4433 Survey of Living Primates 3 credits. Anatomy, behavioral ecology, and adaptive diversity of extant non-human primates, including a history of  primate/human interactions. PREREQ: ANTH 2230 and ANTH 2232; or BIOL 1101 and BIOL 1102; or permission of instructor.  AF

ANTH 4435 Survey of Fossil Primates 3 credits. Evolution and adaptations of  primates from the earliest primates to the enigmatic giants of the Pleistocene. PREREQ: ANTH 2230, ANTH 2232; or BIOL 1101, and BIOL 1102; or permission of instructor.   AF

ANTH 4439 Principles of Taphonomy 3 credits. Effects of processes which modify organisms between death and the time the usually fossilized remains are studied. Emphasis on vertebrates. Crosslisted as BIOL 4439 and GEOL 4439. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. AS

ANTH 4449 Methods and Techniques of Ethnographic Field Research 3 credits. Participant observation, field notes, data types, analytical procedures, interviewing skills, oral history, report writing. PREREQ: ANTH 4480 or permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4450 Introduction to Socio-linguistics 3 credits. Study of the patterned covariation of language and society, social dialects and social styles in language; problems of bilingualism, multilingualism, creoles and language uses.Cross-listed as ENGL 4488. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107; ENGL 2280 or ENGL 2281; or permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4452 American Indian Verbal Arts 3 credits. Analysis of current theories in the study of oral literature and ethnopoetics, focusing on the oral traditions of American Indians. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107 or permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4453 American Indian Literature 3 credits. Considers literary works by and about North American native people, especially in relationship to history, genre, and culture, including oral traditions. Cross-listed as ENGL 4453. PREREQ: Goal 1. R2

ANTH 4454 Survey of American Indian Languages 3 credits. History of scholarship, analysis and classification of American Indian languages with emphasis on the languages of a particular phylum or geographical area. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107 or permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4455 Introduction to Phonetics 3 credits. Introduction to descriptive linguistics focusing on the phonetics and phonetic phenomena of English and the other languages of the world. Extensive practice in perception and production of such phenomena. Cross-listed as LANG 4455. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107. D

ANTH 4456 Introduction to Phonology and Morphology 3 credits. Phonological theory and analysis; current theories in morphology. Phonological rules, representations, underlying forms, derivations, justifications of phonological analyses; morphological structure, derivational and inflectional morphology; relation of morphology to phonology. Cross-listed as LANG 4456. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107. D

ANTH 4457 Survey of Indo-European Languages 3 credits. Survey of Indo-European languages from ancient to modern times, their relationships to one another, and chief characteristics. Cross-listed as LANG 4457. PREREQ: Completion of Goal 10B. D

ANTH 4458 Historical Linguistics 3 credits. The methods and theories of the historical study of language. The comparative method, internal reconstruction, linguistic change over time, genetic typology of languages, and applications to prehistory. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107. AS

ANTH 4459 Linguistic Field Methods 3 credits. Practical experience in linguistic analysis of a language using data elicited from a native speaker. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: ANTH 4456 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4463 Applied Statistics in Anthropology 3 credits. Practical applications of commonly used statistical analyses in anthropology. PREREQ: MATH 1153 or permission of instructor. AF

ANTH 4464 Advanced Analytical Methods in Anthropology 3 credits. Examination and practical experience in applying advanced quantitative and qualitative methods and analyses in anthropological research. PREREQ: ANTH 4463. AS

ANTH 4466 Current Issues in Indian Country 3 credits. Survey of significant issues affecting Indian communities including religious freedom, economic development, judicial systems, treaty rights and environmental regulation. D

ANTH 4472 Native American Arts 3 credits. Survey of Native American arts and industries, including prehistoric, ethnographic, and contemporary venues. PREREQ: ANTH 2238 and permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4474 Special Topics in Indian Education 3 credits. Rotating review of topics dealing with issues in Indian education. Consult current schedule of classes for exact course being taught. D

ANTH 4476 Seminar in American Indian Studies 3 credits. Advanced-level course with critical examination, readings, discussion and presentation of selected issues facing American Indians. PREREQ: 9 credits of American Indian Studies or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4478 Federal Indian Law 3 credits. Examination of tribal governments; their relationship with the federal government; sovereignty, jurisdictional conflicts over land and resources; and economic development. Cross-listed as POLS 4478. D

ANTH 4479 Tribal Governments 3 credits. Complex legal position of Indian tribes as self-governing entities; principles of inherent powers; governmental organization, lawmaking, justice, relation to state and federal government. Cross-listed as POLS 4479. D

ANTH 4480 Varieties of American English 3 credits. In-depth study of various dialects of American English, including historical evolution of different dialects, effects of migration on dialects, and influences of non-English immigrant languages on development of American English. Field-work studying the Snake River dialects of Idaho. Cross-listed as ENGL 4480. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107. D

ANTH 4481 Specializations in Anthropology 3 credits. Rotating specialized topics such as applied anthropology, proxemics, ethnology, religion, international development. See class schedule for titles. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: Upper Division status or permission of instructor.  D

ANTH 4482 Independent Problems in Anthropology 1-3 credits. Investigation of an anthropological problem chosen by the student and approved by the staff. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4483 Field Research 3 credits. Practical experience in field research. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4484 Special Topics in Linguistics 3 credits. Rotating topics in different areas of linguistics. Consult current schedule of classes for exact course being taught. May be repeated with different content. Cross-listed as ENGL 4484 and LANG 4484. PREREQ: ANTH/ENGL/LANG 1107 or ENGL 2280 or ENGL 2281. D

ANTH 4485 Anthropology of War and Violence 3 credits. Survey of war and violence from its evolutionary foundations through its modern representations. History and ethnography of violent conflict around the world. PREREQ: Any upper division  social science course. AS

ANTH 4486 Archaeology Field School 1-6 credits. Practical field and laboratory training in archaeological excavation techniques and methods of analysis. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: ANTH 2203 or permission of instructor. Su

ANTH 4487 Ethnographic Field School 1-6 credits. Supervised fieldwork in cultural anthropology in a given ethnographic setting where students and faculty work on a specific set of field problems. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: ANTH 2250 and 4449 or permission of instructor. D

ANTH 4489 Special Topics in American Indian Studies 3 credits. Rotating review of topics dealing with issues in American Indian studies. Consult current schedule of classes for exact course being taught. May be repeated with different content. D

ANTH 4490 Topics in Folklore 3 credits.  Focused study of an issue in folkloristics or a particular genre of folklore, including history of the scholarship concerning that issue or genre. Rotating topics. May be repeated for up to 9 credits with different topics. Cross-listed as ENGL 4490.  R1

ANTH 4491 Archaeology Laboratory Analysis 3 credits. Directed analysis of archaeological remains and report writing. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. PREREQ: Permission of instructor. F, S, W

ANTH 4492 Senior Seminar 3 credits. Integration and application of anthropological theories and methods to current research issues. S

ANTH 4493 Interdisciplinary Anthropology 3 credits. Rotating review of cross-disciplinary anthropology; psychological, medical, visual, educational, biodiversity conservation. See current class schedule for course titles. May be repeated for up to 6 credits. D

ANTH 4494 Visual Anthropology 3 credits. Documentary and ethnographic filmmaking techniques including story structure, interviewing, audio and lighting, camera handling, composition, POV, and editing. Anthropological critiques of visual representation. Students create their own short film for a final project. May be repeated for up to 6 credits.PREREQ: ANTH 1100 or ANTH 2250 or permission of instructor. F

ANTH 4495 Department Colloquium 1 credit. Presentations of current research issues in Anthropology by faculty and students. S

ANTH 4497 Workshop 1-2 credits. Workshops aimed at the development and improvement of skills. Does not satisfy requirements for a major or a minor. May be repeated. Graded S/U. D

IDAHO STATE UNIVERSITY
Academic Information 
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Revised: July 2010