BA in Anthropology (Sociocultural Double Major) (39.5 hours*)
This major is designed to accommodate the varying interests of students from a range of other disciplines, but it is only available to students completing an additional major in another field. Its purpose is to allow students with other majors to add the perspectives that anthropology is uniquely qualified to provide.
Program Requirements | View MAP
- Complete all requirements of a primary major. Double counting courses between primary major and anthropology will not be allowed.
- Complete the following:
ANTHR 101 : Social/Cultural Anthropology.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter; Spring; Summer |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Aspects of society and culture: kinship, beliefs, economy, and political order among peoples worldwide. Methods and perspectives used in social/cultural anthropology. |
| NOTE: | This course is part of a GE Mosaic. See ge.byu.edu/mosaic-list for more information. |
ANTHR 150 : Introduction to the Major.
(.5:1:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Overview of anthropology major and graduation requirements; preparing for senior thesis sequence; career opportunities; and graduate school application process. |
ANTHR 205 : Foundations of Anthropological Theory.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter |
| PREREQUISITE: | ANTHR 101 |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Ideas from Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Steward studied for a secure foundation for understanding the antecedents of current theory. |
ANTHR 309 : Language, Culture, and Society.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter; Spring |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Linguistic anthropology as a way of doing ethnography; language as symbolic form, vehicle of thought, and instrument of social interaction; speech events as cultural texts. |
ANTHR 442 : Ethnographic Skills.
(3:2:ARR)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Spring |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Methods, rationale, limitations, ethical issues, and practice of participant observation, interviewing, quantitative measurement, and other procedures. Prepare ORCA and IRB proposals to guide Ethnographic Field Project (Anthr 495). Secure IRB approval. Local fieldwork exercises. |
ANTHR 495R : Ethnographic Field Project.
(3-6:0:ARR)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | ; Spring; Summer |
| PREREQUISITE: | ANTHR 205 & ANTHR 206 & ANTHR 442 |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Conduct field work. Maintain, code, and index field notes, interview transcripts, and other data sources in preparation for Anthr 499 thesis write-up. |
| NOTE: | IRB approval and instructor's consent required before departure to field. No class meetings. |
ANTHR 499 : Senior Thesis.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter |
| PREREQUISITE: | Anthr 205, 206, 442, 495 (for sociocultural); 205, 206, 215, 402, 454R, 455R, 456R (for archaeology). |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Supervised analysis and write-up of data generated during field project. Refinement for publication. |
- Complete 6 hours from the following:
ANTHR 317 : Native Peoples of North America.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter Even Yrs. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Indian groups at the time of the European arrival; social organization, beliefs, values, economy, and adaptation to environment. |
ANTHR 326 : Guatemalan Society and Culture.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter |
| DESCRIPTION:  | History, culture, society, and life (economic, familial, religious) among peoples of Guatemala. Guatemala as exemplar of colonial, cultural, and global processes evident throughout Latin America. |
ANTHR 330 : Peoples of Africa.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter Even Yrs. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Political, economic, and social organization, family life, language, worldview, religion, ritual, artistic expression, ecological adaptation, and contemporary development issues among rural and urban sub-Saharan peoples. |
| NOTE: | This course is part of a GE Mosaic. See ge.byu.edu/mosaic-list for more information. |
ANTHR 343 : Chinese Culture and Society.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter Odd Yrs. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Cultural and social institutions of traditional and modern China, including mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, or other areas of Chinese impact. |
| NOTE: | This course is part of a GE Mosaic. See ge.byu.edu/mosaic-list for more information. |
ANTHR 345 : American Culture.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Perspectives and methods for making sense of mainstream middle-class American society; American ways of being-in-the-world, of believing, behaving, and belonging; American cultural themes. |
ANTHR 390R : Special Topics in Regional Anthropology.
(.5-3:ARR:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | Offered when unique opportunities or needs arise. |
| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Subjects related to a particular area or people. |
ANTHR 439 : Psychological Anthropology.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| DESCRIPTION:  | Culture/mind relationship. Cross-cultural variation in concepts of person, emotions, and treatment modalities by society. Psychological implications of cultural differences in childrearing. |
- Complete 6 hours from the following:
ANTHR 402 : Quantitative Methods for Anthropology.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Quantitative methods in archaeology and sociocultural anthropology, including methods of organizing, exploring, and presenting data, probability, and statistical inference. |
ANTHR 430 : Moral and Ritual Institutions.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Anthropological approaches to religion; its content and relation to other social institutions in societies ranging from gatherers to industrialists. |
ANTHR 431 : Kinship and Gender.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Kinship theory and analysis, 1920-present. Recent issues in anthropological treatment of gender, marriage, and family structure. |
ANTHR 432 : Economic and Political Institutions.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Connections between wealth and power: political and legal systems in state and nonstate societies; global expansion of capitalism and technology. |
ANTHR 434 : Medical Anthropology.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall Odd Yrs.; Winter Even Yrs. |
| RECOMMENDED: | Anthr 247. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Interactions between culture and health in comparative perspective, emphasizing social, historical, and ecological determinants. |
ANTHR 436 : Symbolic Anthropology.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Winter Odd Yrs. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Social use and understanding of semiotics, signs, symbols, and other meaningful forms as critically constitutive of culture. |
ANTHR 441 : Anthropology of Development.
(3:3:3)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| DESCRIPTION:  | Theory, practice, and research methods regarding the anthropological study and resolution of poverty, disease, malnutrition, displacement, and inadequate educational opportunities. |
ANTHR 490R : Special Topics in Theory and System.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | Offered when unique opportunities or needs arise. |
| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall; Winter |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Subjects related to anthropological theory or the operation of social systems. |
ANTHR 511 : Museums and Cultures.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| WHEN TAUGHT: | Fall Even Yrs. |
| DESCRIPTION:  | Museums in society. Cultural foundations of museum content and sociology of museum use. Analyzing museum studies literature. Visits to area museums. |
- Complete an additional 3 hours from sections 3 or 4 above.
*Hours include courses that may fulfill university core requirements.