2 week Saturday course - Introduction to Anthropology
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2 week Saturday course - Introduction to Anthropology

By Mary Ward Centre

On this course we will examine some of the ways people think and act in different cultures, including our own.

Date and time

Location

Blackfriars Settlement

1 Rushworth Street London SE1 0RB United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 7 days 4 hours
  • In person

Refund Policy

No refunds

About this event

Science & Tech • Other

**Please note, this is a 2-week course on Saturdays. The ticket listed is the cost for 2 weeks.

The dates are

18 Oct 2025, 10:30 - 15:00

25 Oct 2025, 10:30 - 15:00


A famous social anthropologist once described his job as being a sort of cross-cultural private eye, spying into people’s cultures instead of their bedrooms! Anthropologists look at very different societies, often finding different solutions to common human problems, for example the problem of how to obtain food or how to raise children, or how to explain sickness or understand what happens after death. Discovering these differences (or similarities) is fascinating and brings us to the essence of Anthropology - it makes us stand back and question our own assumptions. It shows that almost no piece of human behaviour is either natural or ‘inevitable’.


Who is this course for?

The course is for anyone who is interested in finding out what Anthropology is and why it is useful. The only requirement is that you are open-minded, prepared to contribute to discussion, and interested in people.


What does this course cover

This is an introductory course and the emphasis is on finding out about the subject by actually doing some Anthropology. That will involve examining the ways people think and act in different cultures, including our own. We will look for answers to key questions. What is Anthropology? What does it include? Why is it interesting? Why is it useful? How do anthropologists work? What problems do they meet?

We will focus, for instance, on one of the important organizing principles in human society – reciprocity – examining what it means and how it works (or doesn’t work) in different societies. Underpinning the course is an understanding that each individual brings into class his or her own unique set of assumptions and evaluations based on different beliefs and experiences, and that sharing these different perspectives enriches and deepens learning for all.


By the end of the course, you should be able to:

• Explain what Anthropology is and what distinguishes it from other social sciences

• Recognise and question culturally determined assertions

• Use an anthropological approach to investigate an aspect of culture.

Organized by

Mary Ward Centre

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£78.71
Oct 18 · 10:30 AM GMT+1