Professor Ann
Marie Leshkowich
Beaven 230
aleshkow@holycross.edu
(508) 793-2788 fax (508) 793-3088
Course Description: This course introduces students to the issues, methods, and concepts of economic anthropology. Our goal is to place the study of economic features such as markets, commodities, and money into a larger cross-cultural context by exploring relations of power, morality, kinship, gender, exchange, and social transformation. We will explore such diverse topics as gift exchange on a tropical Pacific island, tea plantations in India, the rise of a culture of capitalism in Western Europe, spirit possession among female employees in a Malaysian electronics factory, rites of worship to the devil in a Bolivian tin mine, and the culture of Wall Street. As we examine these issues, we will seek to answer three key questions:
1) How have anthropologists approached the study of the economy?
2) What do we mean by capitalism, economic development, globalization, and neoliberalism?
3) How are individuals and communities around the globe responding to contemporary economic processes?
Course SyllabusStudy Guide Questions for Readings
Announcements: Will be posted here as necessary
For more information, contact: aleshkow@holycross.edu