Gender in Cross-Cultural Perspective ANTH2025  - Details

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Later Year Course


Offered By: School of Archaeology & Anthropology
Academic Career: Undergraduate
Course Subject: Anthropology
Offered in: Second Semester, 2010
Unit Value: 6 units
Course Description:

Anthropology is uniquely situated to look into concepts and theories of gender, sex and sexuality through its concern with the culturally-specific character of human categories and practices. This course explores gender, sex and sexuality across a range of cultural settings seeking, in the process, to question most of what we - including most theorists of sex/gender - take for granted about the gendered and sexed character of human identity and difference. Topics explored include: the saliency of the categories man and woman; the relationships between race and gender; the role of colonialism and neocolonialism in the representation of gender, sex and sexuality; the usefulness of the notion of oppression; the relationship between cultural conceptions of personhood and cultural conceptions of gender; and the ethnocentricity of the concepts of gender, sex and sexuality themselves. To assist these explorations we will make use of cross-cultural case studies in a number of areas including rape, prostitution, work and domesticity, the third sex and homosexuality.

Learning Outcomes:  

On completion of this course, students will have gained the following:

  • 1) An understanding of the diversity of knowledges and practices pertaining to sex/gender found throughout the world;
  • 2) The analytic and critical skills necessary to interrogate and deconstruct assumptions about sex/gender found in contemporary western societies (including Australia);
  • 3) A grasp of key issues in the anthropology of gender, including the relationship between race and gender, the role of colonialism and neo-colonialism in the creation of gender categories, the ethnocentricity of the concept of ‘oppression', and the problems associated with the categories of ‘man' and ‘woman';
  • 4) The ability to analyse, from different cultural perspectives, a range of gendered practices including rape, prostitution, veiling, clitoridectomy and the third sex.
Indicative Assessment:

Tutorial attendance and participation (15%), 1,500-2,000 word essay (40%) and take-home exam�(45%).

Workload:

2 hours of lectures and one hour of tutorial per week

Areas of Interest: Anthropology
Requisite Statement:

Two first-year courses to the value of 12 units in Anthropology; or Sociology; or Gender Sexuality and Culture.

Majors/Specialisations: Anthropology, Gender, Sexuality and Culture, and Development Studies
Academic Contact: Dr Christine Helliwell