Spring 2026 Anthropology UN3661 section 001

SOUTH ASIA

SOUTH ASIA: ANTHRO APPROACHES

Call Number 00411
Day & Time
Location
T 2:10pm-4:00pm
912 MILSTEIN CEN
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Elizabeth M Green
Type COLLOQUIA
Course Description

This course draws on ethnography, history, fiction, and other genres to think about diverse peoples and places in the region known as South Asia. Rather than attempt to fix or define "South Asia" as a singular category, we will explore how particular social and scholarly categories through which dimensions of South Asian life have come to be known (such as caste, class, religion, gender, sexuality, disability, and kinship) are experienced, negotiated, and reworked by actual persons in specific situations. By examining both categories and practices, we will ask: What kinds of relationships exist between the messiness of everyday life and the classifications used by both scholars and "local" people to describe and make sense of it? How do scholarly and bureaucratic ideas not merely reflect but also shape lived realities? How do lived realities affect the ways in which categories are named and understood? In addressing such questions, categories sometimes thought of as stable or timeless emerge as, in fact, contingent and embodied. 

Web Site Vergil
Department Anthropology @Barnard
Enrollment 4 students (15 max) as of 1:06PM Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Subject Anthropology
Number UN3661
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note **Instructor Permission Required**
Section key 20261ANTH3661V001