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The Department of Anthropology stands as a premier institution for graduate and undergraduate studies across cultural anthropology, archaeology, linguistic anthropology, and biological anthropology—the four core disciplines within the undergraduate program. The department prides itself on its diverse faculty specializations, including archaeological concentrations like medieval studies and prehistoric research in Europe, the Near East, and South Asia; biological anthropology domains such as molecular primatology, primate behavioral ecology, and human evolution studies; linguistic anthropology focuses like discourse analysis and language acquisition; and sociocultural anthropology expertise spanning regions from North America and Africa to India, China, the Middle East, Russia, the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, Australia, and the South Pacific. The program emphasizes key theoretical frameworks, exploring systems of thought, symbolic representations of identity and society, gender dynamics, evolving social structures in small communities and urban environments, medical anthropology, evolutionary studies of primates and human origins, religion, art, science research, race and ethnicity, and ethnographic representation in film and media.
Cultural Anthropology examines how societies construct order and meaning, with a focus on social distinctions, hierarchies, and inequalities. Covering subjects from art and economics to gender, race, politics, religion, public health, and scientific studies, it represents one of the broadest subfields while maintaining a foundational methodology: immersive fieldwork.