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ANTH30N7: Anthropologies of Knowledge

Please ensure you check the module availability box for each module outline, as not all modules will run in each academic year. Each module description relates to the year indicated in the module availability box, and this may change from year to year, due to, for example: changing staff expertise, disciplinary developments, the requirements of external bodies and partners, and student feedback. Current modules are subject to change in light of the ongoing disruption caused by Covid-19.

Type Open
Level 3
Credits 10
Availability Not available in 2023/24
Module Cap None.
Location Durham
Department Anthropology

Prerequisites

  • ANTH2051 Politics and Economics OR ANTH2141 Global Health and Disease

Corequisites

  • None.

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None.

Aims

  • To understand and critically assess key anthropological approaches to knowledge
  • To understand how knowing happens as a social practice
  • To comparatively assess how ethnography helps illuminate the creation and contestation of knowledge in different domains
  • To critically interrogate how the authority of expertise is shaped and contested through wider assumptions, cultural contexts and social practices.

Content

  • Key theoretical approaches to knowledge in social anthropology (including relevant insights from cognate disciplines including STS), including Foucaultian, Actor-network-theory and practice-based approaches.
  • Shifts in wider orientations to expertise, from mid-twentieth century scientific and technological rationalism to post-structuralism, post-truth and decolonial perspectives.
  • Enlightenment and post-enlightenment approaches
  • The social life of expertise
  • Contemporary ethnographic studies of knowledge as ways to understand the politics of expertise.
  • Critical reflections on anthropology and ethnography as a forms of knowledge.
  • Case studies of knowledge as social practice, including in relation to Science, Art, Architecture and Creativity, Heritage, Policy and Planning and International Development.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • Understand key theoretical paradigms in the anthropology of knowledge
  • Appreciate how the authority of specific regimes of knowledge is constructed and contested in particular social and historical contexts
  • Demonstrate critical awareness of anthropology and ethnography as specific forms of knowledge, associated with particular forms of authority.
  • Apply anthropological approaches to contemporary questions regarding the problems and possibilities of expertise.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • Link conceptual frameworks to specific ethnographic cases, and appreciate how conceptual possibilities expand from these examples.
  • Demonstrate reflexive awareness of the ways in which students own knowledge is situated and shaped by their own individual circumstances and the social contexts they inhabit.
  • Competence in accessing and assimilating specialised research literature.
  • Reflect on the socially contingent nature of knowledge, including the forms of knowledge that shape their own experiences of the world Link anthropological theories of knowledge to contemporary contexts beyond the classroom.

Key Skills:

  • Demonstrate competence in the preparation and effective communication of different conceptual approaches
  • Demonstrate ability to synthesize, describe and critically assess the merits of different approaches.
  • Interpret different theories in light of other competing theories and understand the assumptions that underpin these differences.
  • Link ideas to the social contexts in which these developed.
  • Demonstrate competence in appropriate bibliographic referencing
  • Demonstrate competence in ability to structure narratives in a clear and logical way.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Lectures introduce key approaches, debates and ethnographies in the anthropology of knowledge and cognate disciplines.
  • Seminars explore ideas introduced in lectures through key ethnographic and conceptual readings, and reflect on their relevance to contemporary situations.
  • Preparation for seminars and reading time will allow students to develop their understanding of material prior to seminars and written assignments.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lecture10Weekly1 hour10 
Seminar5Fortnightly1 hour5 
Preparation and Reading85 
Total100 

Summative Assessment

Component: CourseworkComponent Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay2500 words100 

Formative Assessment

A summary and critical reflection on one key ethnographic reading in the anthropology of knowledge. Students will be encouraged to choose a reading that is relevant to their essay topics, in to use this as an opportunity to develop initial reflections on the topic (750 words).

More information

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