Anthropology

Ein Podcast von Oxford University

Kategorien:

264 Folgen

  1. An Africanist's Legacy: Performing fragmentary movements - perspectives on the life-history of a Muslim dancer-choreographer

    Vom: 24.8.2010
  2. An Africanist's Legacy: Credit societies and the search for school fees in Uganda

    Vom: 24.8.2010
  3. Part 1: Studying Anthropology at Oxford

    Vom: 12.7.2010
  4. Part 2: Studying at Oxford

    Vom: 12.7.2010
  5. Obesity: A Personal View

    Vom: 12.7.2010
  6. Cognition, Religion and Theology

    Vom: 12.7.2010
  7. Tibetan Vampire Slayers in Nepal

    Vom: 12.7.2010
  8. Measurement of Bodily Transformations (1 Feb 2010)

    Vom: 15.6.2010
  9. Dying for Islam: An Alternative History (12 Feb 2010)

    Vom: 15.6.2010
  10. Nutritional Anthropology Lecture 5: Political Ecology of Food Security (15 March 2010)

    Vom: 15.6.2010
  11. Nutritional Anthropology Lecture 4: Intensification of subsistence (10 Feb 2010)

    Vom: 27.5.2010
  12. Interview with Evans-Pritchard Lecturer Dr Charles Stewart (13 May 2010)

    Vom: 27.5.2010
  13. Neither Freud nor Artemidorous, Evans-Pritchard Lecture by Charles Stewart (27 April 2010)

    Vom: 27.5.2010
  14. Facial tattooing among Drung women in Southwest China

    Vom: 12.4.2010
  15. Qigong Deviation as a Diplomatic Disaster

    Vom: 12.4.2010
  16. Nutritional Anthropology Lecture 3: Hunter-gatherer diet (5 Feb 2010)

    Vom: 7.4.2010
  17. Medical anthropology: Famine, food crisis and living standards in North Korea (25 Jan 2010)

    Vom: 7.4.2010
  18. Anthropology seminar: Indigenous capitalism in Upland Indonesia (5 Feb 2010)

    Vom: 7.4.2010
  19. Nutritional Anthropology Lecture 2: Nutritional Quality and Child Growth

    Vom: 10.3.2010
  20. Anthropology seminar: Re-Tooling a Body with The Body

    Vom: 10.3.2010

13 / 14

The Oxford Anthropology Podcast brings together talks by internationally renowned scholars and cutting edge researchers. Their lectures explore a wide range of human experience and feature case studies from around the world. We are grateful to the speakers and staff and students from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography who have made this podcast possible.

Visit the podcast's native language site