Anthropology
A podcast by Oxford University
Categories:
264 Episoade
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The Moral Economy of Infrastructures in Everest Tourism
Publicat: 06.02.2024 -
Pentecostalism, Deliverance and Queer Sexuality in Nigeria: Literary Representations
Publicat: 06.02.2024 -
Stepping in, helping out, competing with…? State and civic actors in Ukraine’s wartime heritage work
Publicat: 25.01.2024 -
Parasites, Invention, and Grace: Taking Turns in a Streetcorner Bureaucracy
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
Anthropology, Philosophy and Symmetrisation
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
Intimate Rites: Ancestors and Queer Kinship in Zimbabwe
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
Nutritional Anthropology
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
How to Stitch Ethnography
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
The Rise and Fall of Generations
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
Living in Tide: The Climate of the Urban Sea
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
Crude Sonics: Field Recordings from an Extractive Zone
Publicat: 02.10.2023 -
China in the global reproduction migration order
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Food insecurity of fatness: from evolutionary ecology to social science
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Intimate geopolitics: migration, marriage of citizenship across Chinese borders
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
The dual burden of malnutrition and the obstetric dilemma
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Grandparenting migration: reproduction, care circulations and care ethics across borders
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Investment migration and social reproduction: the case of recent patterns of migration from China
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Iron, infection and anaemia: evolutionary viewpoint on a huge global health problem
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Birth tourism from China and Taiwan to the United States: cosmopolitan strategies and aspirations
Publicat: 08.07.2019 -
Stunting does not equal malnutrition: evolutionary perspective on human height variation applied to public health
Publicat: 08.07.2019
The Oxford Anthropology Podcast brings together talks by internationally renowned scholars and cutting edge researchers. Their lectures explore a wide range of human experience and feature case studies from around the world. We are grateful to the speakers and staff and students from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography who have made this podcast possible.