Courses by semester
Courses for Summer 2025
Complete Cornell University course descriptions and section times are in the Class Roster.
Course ID | Title | Offered |
---|---|---|
ANTHR 1300 |
Human Evolution: Genes, Behavior, and the Fossil Record
The evolution of humankind is explored through the fossil record, studies of the biological differences among current human populations, and a comparison with our closest relatives, the primates. This course investigates the roots of human biology and behavior with an evolutionary framework. Catalog Distribution: (BIO-AS) (OPHLS-AG) Full details for ANTHR 1300 - Human Evolution: Genes, Behavior, and the Fossil Record |
Winter, Spring, Summer. |
ANTHR 2400 |
Cultural Diversity and Contemporary Issues
This course will introduce students to the meaning and significance of forms of cultural diversity for the understanding of contemporary issues. Drawing from films, videos, and selected readings, students will be confronted with different representational forms that portray cultures in various parts of the world, and they will be asked to examine critically their own prejudices as they influence the perception and evaluation of cultural differences. We shall approach cultures holistically, assuming the inseparability of economies, kinship, religion, and politics, as well as interconnections and dependencies between world areas such as Africa, Latin America, the West. Among the issues considered: political correctness and truth; nativism and ecological diversity; race, ethnicity, and sexuality; sin, religion, and war; global process and cultural integrity. Catalog Distribution: (GLC-AS, SCD-AS) (CA-AG, D-AG) Full details for ANTHR 2400 - Cultural Diversity and Contemporary Issues |
Spring, Summer. |
ARKEO 2700 |
Introduction to the Classical World in 24 Objects
The art of Ancient Greece and Rome has a complex legacy within western culture that is inseparable from ideas about power, beauty, identity, and knowledge. As such, 'Classical' art has been appropriated for all kinds of ends, many of them deeply problematic. But what did ancient statues, paintings, vessels, or buildings mean for the cultures that originally created, viewed, and lived alongside them? How were they embedded within political and social structures, religious practices, and public or domestic spaces? What can they tell us about practices of representation and story-telling? How might they help us access ancient attitudes to gender, ethnicity, or social status? And why is any of this still relevant today? This course on Greek and Roman art and archaeology will address all these questions. Covering the time span from the Bronze Age (3rd millennium BCE) to the late Roman Empire (4th century CE), we will focus on one object or monument each lecture, considering how it can be considered exemplary for its time. Where possible, we will engage with artefacts in our collections at Cornell, including the plaster-casts, as we develop skills in viewing, analyzing, and contextualizing material evidence. Catalog Distribution: (ALC-AS) (CA-AG, LA-AG) Full details for ARKEO 2700 - Introduction to the Classical World in 24 Objects |
Fall. |