240036 VO The anthropology of India and South Asia: An introduction (2021W)
Labels
GEMISCHT
The lecturer can invite students to a grade-relevant discussion about partial achievements. Partial achievements that are obtained by fraud or plagiarized result in the non-evaluation of the course (entry 'X' in certificate). The plagiarism software 'Turnitin' will be used for courses with continuous assessment.
An/Abmeldung
Hinweis: Ihr Anmeldezeitpunkt innerhalb der Frist hat keine Auswirkungen auf die Platzvergabe (kein "first come, first served").
Details
Sprache: Englisch
Prüfungstermine
- Mittwoch 26.01.2022 13:15 - 14:45 Digital
- Dienstag 01.03.2022 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal III NIG Erdgeschoß
- Freitag 01.04.2022 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß
- Montag 02.05.2022 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal III NIG Erdgeschoß
Lehrende
Termine (iCal) - nächster Termin ist mit N markiert
Update 12.01.2022: Due to the current situation the course will be held digital until the end of the semester.
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Update 13.12.2021: The course will be held digital until December 17.
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Update 22.11.2021: The course will be held digital during lockdown.
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Update 02.11.2021: The lecture on December 1st will take place from 9:45-11:15 in HS I.
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Mittwoch
06.10.
13:15 - 14:45
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß -
Mittwoch
13.10.
13:15 - 14:45
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß -
Mittwoch
20.10.
13:15 - 14:45
Hybride Lehre
Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß - Donnerstag 28.10. 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß
- Mittwoch 03.11. 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß
- Mittwoch 10.11. 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß
- Mittwoch 17.11. 13:15 - 14:45 Hörsaal II NIG Erdgeschoß
- Mittwoch 24.11. 13:15 - 14:45 Digital
- Mittwoch 01.12. 09:45 - 11:15 Digital
- Mittwoch 15.12. 13:15 - 14:45 Digital
- Mittwoch 12.01. 13:15 - 14:45 Digital
- Mittwoch 19.01. 13:15 - 14:45 Digital
Information
Ziele, Inhalte und Methode der Lehrveranstaltung
Art der Leistungskontrolle und erlaubte Hilfsmittel
Multiple-choice examination. No materials permitted.
26 January 2022
1 March 2022
1 April 2022
2 May 2022
26 January 2022
1 March 2022
1 April 2022
2 May 2022
Mindestanforderungen und Beurteilungsmaßstab
For a positive grade, 51 % is required90-100 %= 1
77-89 %= 2
64-76 %= 3
51-63 %= 4
0-50 % = 5
77-89 %= 2
64-76 %= 3
51-63 %= 4
0-50 % = 5
Prüfungsstoff
Multiple-choice examination covering all the topics discussed in class. The examination will assess the students’ thorough and critical understanding of the readings
Literatur
2010. Seven prevalent misconceptions about India’s caste system. In D.P. Mines and S. Lamb (eds.) Everyday life in South Asia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 153-154Ahearn L.M. 2004. Literacy, power, and agency: Love letters and development in Nepal. Language and Education 18(4): 305-316Alter J. 1997. Seminal truth: A modern science of male celibacy in north India. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 11(3): 275-298Bedi T. 2018. Urban histories of place and labour: The chillia taximen of Bombay/Mumbai. Modern Asian Studies 52(5): 1604-1638Ciotti M. 2006. ‘In the past we were a bit "Chamar"’: Education as a self- and community engineering process in northern India. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (N.S.) 12: 899-916Ciotti M. 2010. ‘The bourgeois woman and the half-naked one’: Or the Indian nation's contradictions personified. Modern Asian Studies 4: 785-815Ciotti M. 2011. Remaking traditional sociality, ephemeral friendships and enduring political alliances: ‘State-made’ Dalit youth in rural northern Indian society. Focaal Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology 59: 19-32Del Franco N. 2010. Aspirations and self-hood: Exploring the meaning of higher secondary education for girl college students in rural Bangladesh. Compare 40(2): 147-165Fuller C. 2004. The camphor flame:Popular Hinduism and society in India - Revised and expanded edition. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, pp. 3-28Fuller C. J. and Narasimhan H. 2013. Marriage, education, and employment among Tamil Brahman women in South India, 18912010. Modern Asian Studies 47(1): 53-84Gorringe H. 2008.The caste of the nation: Untouchability and citizenship in South India. Contributions to Indian Sociology (n.s.) 42(1): 123-49Hossain A. 2012. Beyond emasculation: Being Muslim and becoming hijra in South Asia. Asian Studies Review 36(4): 495-513Jodhka S.S. 2017. Caste in contemporary India. London: Routledge, pp. 1-18Khurshid A. 2017. Does education empower women? The regulated empowerment of parhi likhi women in Pakistan. Anthropology & Education Quarterly 48(3): 25-268Liechty M. 2010. "Out here in Kathmandu": Youth and the contradictions of modernity in urban Nepal. In D.P. Mines and S Lamb (eds.) Everyday life in South Asia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 40-49Nahar P. and Richters A. 2011. Suffering of childless women in Bangladesh: The intersection of social identities of gender and class. Anthropology & Medicine 18(3): 327-338Osella C. and Osella F. 1998. Friendship and flirting: Micropolitics in Kerala, South India. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4(2): 189-206Philips A. 2003. Rethinking culture and development: Marriage and gender among the tea plantation workers in Sri Lanka. Gender & Development 11(2): 20-29Rao N. and Hossain M.I. 2012. "I want to be respected": Migration, mobility, and the construction of alternate educational discourses in rural Bangladesh. Anthropology & Education Quarterly 43(4): 415-428Tyagi A. and Sen A. 2020. Love-jihad (Muslim sexual seduction) and ched-chad (sexual harassment): Hindu nationalist discourses and the ideal/deviant urban citizen in India. Gender, Place & Culture 27(1): 104-125van der Veer P. 2002. Religion in South Asia. Annual Review of Anthropology 31: 173-187Zaman M.F. 2019. Segregated from the city: Women’s spaces in Islamic movements in Pakistan. City & Society 31(1): 55-76Zharkevich I. 2019. Money and blood: Remittances as a substance of relatedness in transnational families in Nepal. American Anthropologist 121(4): 884-896
Zuordnung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis
Letzte Änderung: Fr 12.05.2023 00:20
understand both shared features and internal diversity within South Asia;
identify elements testifying to South Asian societies’ historical transformation;
place South Asian societies within global trends;
make connections between the readings and the media sphere.