Anthropology
Ein Podcast von Oxford University
Kategorien:
264 Folgen
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Anthropology, Ethnomusicology, the Anthropology of Dance: Same Difference?
Vom: 27.5.2015 -
The Agency of Eating: Mediation, Food and the Body in Highland Ecuador
Vom: 27.5.2015 -
Lost objects, imaginary assemblages and the mass graves of the Spanish Civil War
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
On representation and power: portrait of a Vodun leader in present-day Benin
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
Moving the cracks: motorcycle taxis, politics and the fragility of power in Bangkok
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
Ecology of undernutrition and infection
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
Biocultural approaches to Type 2 diabetes
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
Obesity: epidemiology and biocultural factors
Vom: 7.5.2015 -
From Amazonian couvade to neo-couvade in cosmopolitan trends of co-parenting: a comparative analysis
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Infant feeding and child health and survival in early twentieth-century England
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Revisiting breastfeeding in light of the gift logic. Is a comparison of Gogo and Italian women possible?
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
How to protect your newborn from neonatal death: spirits and infant feeding practices in the Gambia
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Bangladeshi women's experiences of infant feeding in Tower Hamlets
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Breastpump technology and 'natural' motherly milk in Enlightenment France
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Hiring a wetnurse in seventeenth-century England
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Negotiating nutrition: from baby to toddler in the Peruvian Andes
Vom: 13.4.2015 -
Can there be an anthropology of Hinduism?
Vom: 29.1.2015 -
Cleaning up and moving on
Vom: 29.1.2015 -
Biosecurity practices in labs and museums: sentinels, simulation, stockpiling
Vom: 29.1.2015 -
Ways of speaking, ways of knowing
Vom: 29.1.2015
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.