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Nov 21, 2024
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ANTH 319 - Cross-Cultural Politics of Reproduction 2024-2025 Catalog Year
Credit(s): 3 Lecture: 3 Non-Lecture: 0
The biological and social reproduction of the human species is a complex process that engages all major institutions of society: family, religion, morality, health, economy, and government. Using cross-cultural and social historical materials, this course will examine cases in which control over reproduction is contested. We will focus on the various ways anthropologists have theorized reproduction, as well as draw from research across the social sciences. Key topics will include: the medicalization of reproduction, reproductive technologies, ideas of “the family,” activism, eugenics, reproductive justice, and queer family formation. Class materials will explore these topics in a global perspective; students will also select a topic of their choice in a non-US cultural context to examine throughout the semester’s assignments.
Repeatable: Not repeatable Offered: Once a Year
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