Anthropology
A podcast by Oxford University
264 Episoade
-
On forms of mental discipline and understanding of national psyche in contemporary Serbia
Publicat: 29.01.2015 -
Martyrs, militants and emotions
Publicat: 29.01.2015 -
Water, human evolution and diet
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Marett Memorial Lecture 2014: How to capture the wow. Awe and the study of religion
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Choreographing lived experience: the stories that dancing bodies tell
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Models, muddles and metaphors
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Social anthropology of the arts: expression, genre and agency
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Intersections: an ethnography of everyday togetherness and intensified diversity in Elephant and Castle
Publicat: 02.10.2014 -
Photo archives as historical resources: the Jeffrys and Dalrymple archives compared
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Fifty years of Cameroon unification: controversies and archival echoes
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Inspirations for publications - ISCA Anthropology Book Launch
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
'Native Life', or, Being outside the carbon imagery
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Inequality, insecurity and obesity
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Cultural understandings of roles and responsibilities in addressing obesity
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Culture and motivation: long distance running in Japan and the UK
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Intellectual property and informal economy: a commodity chain from China to Brazil through Paraguay
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Claiming resources, honouring debts: miners, herders and the land masters of Mongolia
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
Do not resuscitate orders in a UK hospital: an ethnography of the future-present
Publicat: 29.04.2014 -
The sharia as a vocation: Islam, law and civility in Lebanon
Publicat: 28.04.2014 -
Victor Turner, anthropology and Christianity
Publicat: 28.04.2014
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.