Anthropology

Ein Podcast von Oxford University

Kategorien:

264 Folgen

  1. Discovering 'justice': the magic of law in the Upper Amazon

    Vom: 28.4.2014
  2. The end of history? What follows the demographic transition?

    Vom: 28.4.2014
  3. Political ecology of disease

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  4. Disease transitions

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  5. Generational change and continuity amongst British mothers

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  6. Contextualising the 'new parenting culture'

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  7. Caring and being cared for in north-western Amazonia

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  8. 'Don't worry, you'll be a grandmother soon!'

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  9. 'I did not know how to tell my parents, so I thought I would have to have an abortion'

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  10. Be(com)ing papa: kinship senescence and the ambivalent inward journeys of ageing men in the Antilles

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  11. Of untold riches and unruly homes: gender and property in neoliberal middle-class Kolkata

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  12. Experimenting with field experiments: moving the lab into the field in ethnographic research

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  13. New York stories: the lives of other citizens

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  14. The adoption of modern contraception in rural Ethiopia: a biocultural approach

    Vom: 3.2.2014
  15. Gift, sacrifice, and deadly rumours (3 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013
  16. Geology, potentiality, speculation: on the indeterminacy of natural resources (10 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013
  17. Conceptualizing new age and neopagan ritual (17 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013
  18. Brazilian serialities: imagining persons (24 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013
  19. Dorr-e Dari (The Pearl of Dari): An Ethnography of Poetry as a Social Practice among Afghans in Iran (23 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013
  20. Provocations for digital anthropology (30 May 2013)

    Vom: 13.11.2013

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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