Ancient Medicine BIAN6519  - Details

Add BIAN6519 - Ancient Medicine to my interest list


Offered By: School of Archaeology & Anthropology
Academic Career: Graduate Coursework
Course Subject: Biological Anthropology
Offered in: Second Semester, 2010
Unit Value: 6 units
Course Description: This course is a survey of medicine, surgery and medical theory and practices from prehistoric times through to the early medieval period. The focus of enquiry is the evolution and development of a suite of medical traditions over time as informed by their respective cultural milieus. Regionally Europe (the Greek and Roman empires specifically), North Africa (Egyptian), the Near East (Mesopotamia), the Indian subcontinent, mainland and insular Southeast Asia and China are explored in detail. Sources for this survey include both received and discovered texts as well as a range of archaeological and osteological evidence.
Learning Outcomes: (1) meet the course aims as outlined previously.

(2) become familiar and comfortable with a broad sample of scholarship on the archaeology, prehistory and history of medicine and surgery

(3) augment the ability to think critically about basic assumptions and conceptual frameworks in analysing medical issues, past and present 

(4) develop skills in oral presentations and debate and in writing about ancient medical issues.

Indicative Assessment: Major Essay 4,000 words maximum (50%) Tutorial Tasks equivalent to 2,000 words (50%)
Workload:

2 hours of lectures and one hour of tutorial per week

Areas of Interest: Biological Anthropology and Forensic Anthropology
Requisite Statement: .
Recommended Courses:

BIAN6512 Ancient Health & Disease

BIAN6517 Human Skeletal Analysis

Prescribed Texts: It is unlikely that I will settle on a single main text due to a lack of any current texts that have the temporal and geographic depth and breadth of this course. Nonetheless, I am reviewing a number of potentially useful introductory texts.
Majors/Specialisations: Forensic Anthropology, Forensic Anthropology, Biological Anthropology, Biological Anthropology, Archaeology, and Archaeology
Programs: Master of Culture, Health and Medicine
Academic Contact: Dr Marc Oxenham