Anthropology
En podcast af Oxford University
264 Episoder
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Dept Seminar: Why do Bayaka Pygmies sing so much?
Udgivet: 18.3.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Money-go-round: personal economies of wealth
Udgivet: 18.3.2011 -
The Anthropology of Production
Udgivet: 18.3.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Claudia's Life - Singular lives, Gypsy metonymy
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Dance culture and its dislocation
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Neo-nationalism five years later
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Dept Seminar: The power of felted cloth through time and space
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Forms of detachment and ethical regard
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Dept Seminar: Kerala Muslim marriage, gender, and intimacy
Udgivet: 21.2.2011 -
Money, Bodies, Materialism and Virtuality
Udgivet: 23.11.2010 -
The Elementary School Teacher, the Thug, and his Grandmother: Brokers and Transnational Migration
Udgivet: 23.11.2010 -
Interview with Professor Byron J Good, 2010 Marett Lecturer
Udgivet: 23.11.2010 -
Religion and change (2003-04 Evans-Pritchard Lecture 5)
Udgivet: 4.11.2010 -
Talking about Somié: from the social to the individual and back (2003-04 Evans-Pritchard Lecture 4)
Udgivet: 4.11.2010 -
Talking about Diko: introducing a woman, and means of researching a life (2003-04 Evans-Pritchard Lecture 3)
Udgivet: 4.11.2010 -
Writing history, talking historically: problems of biography, autobiography and social history (2003-04 Evans-Pritchard Lecture 2)
Udgivet: 4.11.2010 -
Sample of One: joining the queue (2003-04 Evans-Pritchard Lecture 1)
Udgivet: 4.11.2010 -
Race, kinship, genetics and the ambivalence of identity
Udgivet: 27.10.2010 -
What is social anthropology?
Udgivet: 27.10.2010 -
An Africanist's Legacy: Responsibilised citizens? - Discourses and practices around care of the self among HIV positive people in Tanzania
Udgivet: 24.8.2010
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.