
Anthropology and the Study of Humanity
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Episodes
S1 E1 - Why Anthropology Matters
May 25, 201733minBegin with a few of the big questions: Who are we as humans? Where did we come from? Anthropology is the study of humans over time and space, but it is also about bridge-building, connecting, and understanding ourselves and the world around us. Survey the biological, archaeological, linguistic, and cultural approaches to the field.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E2 - Science, Darwin, and Anthropology
May 25, 201731minBecause anthropology is so strongly linked with other sciences, particularly biology, take a guided tour through the history of science over the past 3,000 years. From pre-scientific ideas through the theory of natural selection, see how the emergence of scientific ideas changed the way we understand ourselves and our origins.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E3 - Our Primate Family Tree
May 25, 201729minTravel back in time 63 million years to the beginning of our family tree. Because of our shared evolutionary history, modern humans and other primates have much in common, including our emotional range and our ability to communicate. Review the field of primatology to find out what studying other species can teach us about humanity.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E4 - Paleoanthropology and the Hominin Family
May 25, 201731minShift your attention to the field of paleoanthropology, the study of our human ancestors. Here, trace the development of our species from the earliest bipedal hominids to modern Homo sapiens. Explore archaeological evidence of Homo habilis, Homo erectus, and other species. See how anthropologists continue to test and correct their theories.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E5 - Tracing the Spread of Humankind
May 25, 201727minAnthropologists have several theories for how Homo sapiens spread out of Africa and around the globe. Examine three theories to explain the migration, and then turn to archaeological and genetic evidence to uncover the latest thinking on when and how humans arrived in the Americas.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E6 - Anthropology and the Question of Race
May 25, 201729minConclude this first unit on biological anthropology by unpacking the ambiguities around race, skin color, and biology. After reviewing the history of Social Darwinism, you'll see how Franz Boas and other 20th century anthropologists shifted our understanding of race to show how it is a cultural construct, independent of biology and geography.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E7 - Archaeology and Human Tools
May 25, 201727minShift your attention from biology to archaeology, where you will dig up several answers about the Homo sapiens family tree. Here, Professor Lacy introduces what archaeologists do and how they work. He then examines the history of tools such as the hand-ax and the microlith, which had a tremendous impact on human population.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E8 - Agricultural Roots of Civilization
May 25, 201730minContinue your archaeological studies with a fascinating look at the rise of farming. Why did humans shift from foraging to agriculture 10,000 years ago? How did changing ecology and technological inventions drive this transition? And what lessons does this story have for us today? See how humans must contend with producing more food with less arable land.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E9 - Rise of Urban Centers
May 25, 201729minDelve into the ancient urban experience. After the rise of agriculture, our ancestors invested in the future of humankind by building major cities and civilizations across the planet. After considering what constitutes a city in the first place, you'll take an archaeological tour of several early cities, including Jericho, Aleppo, Uruk, and Cahokia.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E10 - Anthropological Perspectives on Money
May 25, 201727minThe classic story of money says that early humans transitioned from barter to money to credit, but the archaeological record shows we have that history all wrong - that credit emerged before actual money. Study the history of money from an anthropological angle, beginning with early number concepts through the development of paper cash.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E11 - Anthropological Perspectives on Language
May 25, 201731minLanguage has played a starring role in our continued survival as a species, so linguistics is a critical subfield of anthropology. Study the origins of language in our primate cousins and then survey the evolution of language in Homo sapiens. Then see how language has changed our evolution by increasing our capacity for information exchange.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E12 - Apocalyptic Anthropology
May 25, 201730minNo history of humanity would be complete without a few thoughts about how it all ends. Reflect on how different societies have viewed the end of humanity, from the epic cycles of Buddhism and Hinduism to secular techno-apocalypses such as the Singularity. Then see what lessons anthropology may offer in how to avoid extinction.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E13 - Cultural Anthropology and Human Diversity
May 25, 201731minHumans are all the same species, but we have a seemingly infinite cultural diversity. As an introduction to anthropology's fourth major subfield, Professor Lacy takes you around the world to meet Franz Boas, Bronislaw Malinowski, and others who helped anthropology transition from "cultural evolutionism" to "cultural relativism."This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E14 - Field Research in Cultural Anthropology
May 25, 201730minContinue your study of cultural anthropology by looking at how the next generation of field researchers built on the foundation of Boas and Malinowski. See how Zora Neale Hurston, Alfred Kroeber, and Audrey Richards have broadened the way we think about culture, diversity, and social structures.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E15 - Kinship, Family, and Marriage
May 25, 201729minYou likely have a concept for what "family" is, so you might be surprised to learn there is no universal concept for "family" around the world. Apply the anthropological lens to understand how and why different cultures have different ideas about how to structure a family - and what functional logic underlies these differences.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E16 - Sex, Gender, and Sexuality
May 25, 201730minBy this point, it should be no surprise that biological sex and our construct of gender are much more complicated than they seem. Here, Professor Lacy unpacks the cultural and biological questions of sex, gender, and sexuality using genetics, twin studies, and more to show the breadth of human diversity as well as a common humanity.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E17 - Religion and Spirituality
May 25, 201731minAnthropologists study religion as a way of studying humans, and here you'll survey the origins and history of religion, from primate grieving and early human rituals through organized religions and the scientific worldview. Anthropology may not offer new answers about God and the great beyond, but religion offers a fascinating window into humankind.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E18 - Art and Visual Anthropology
May 25, 201729minUntil recently, Westerners understood art in terms of progress, with non-Western art as somehow "primitive." Survey the changing views toward world art throughout the 20th century and the role of art in anthropology. Then turn to explore the benefits and challenges that film brings to ethnographic studies.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E19 - Conflict and Reconciliation across Cultures
May 25, 201730minThis final unit examines several realms of "applied anthropology." Here, discover how anthropology can assist with conflict resolution. After examining the history and nature of war, Professor Lacy offers several case studies around the world for resolving conflicts with anthropological methods.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E20 - Forensics and Legal Anthropology
May 25, 201728minForensics is the science of analyzing and identifying unknown human remains. Using a hypothetical discovery as an example, you'll follow the stages of a forensics exam to see how anthropologists build a profile of the remains. Several test cases show forensics anthropology in action.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E21 - Medical Anthropology
May 25, 201728minAnthropologists recognize a difference between the subjective experience of an illness and the biological phenomenon of a disease. With this distinction in mind, learn how anthropologists study medicine, and how anthropology's four subfields can help us better understand human health and healing.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E22 - Anthropology and Economic Development
May 25, 201731minUsing his own field research as an example, Professor Lacy takes you inside the powerful world of development anthropology. After grounding you in recent development theory, he takes a look at how anthropologists have thought about international development since World War II.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E23 - Cultural Ecology
May 25, 201733minAs explorers of the human condition, anthropologists are particularly interested in the complex relationship between culture and the environment. The field of cultural ecology looks beyond mere environmental determinism and examines how the natural world inspires cultural differences. Review the methods and theory of this field of study.This title is unavailable due to expired rightsS1 E24 - The Anthropology of Happiness
May 25, 201736minWhat is the purpose of life? This is arguably the biggest question of all, and anthropology helps point the way toward a few answers. See how each of the four subfields - biology, archaeology, linguistics, and cultural anthropology - approach the question of human satisfaction and what we can apply to our own lives.This title is unavailable due to expired rights