Cultural Anthropology Track
THE DOCTORAL PROGRAM IN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
During its first fifteen years, our program pioneered new forms of
ethnography, re-theorized culture to comprehend power, inequality,
heterogeneity, contingency, and continuous change, and engaged
conceptual innovations within and beyond the discipline under the
rubric of "culture and power." Rather than reproduce the
boundaries among the traditional subfields of anthropology, we
explored how recombinations of these approaches can elucidate
specific anthropological problems. With our new programmatic
focus, "emerging worlds," we will carry this work forward and
forcefully articulate anthropology's distinctive commitment to the
study of culture as world-making practices, past, present, and
future. In recent years, our department has theorized culture not as
“tradition,” but as the world-making networks, geographies,
innovations, meanings, and assemblages that are carrying us into
the future. Our new initiative in “Emerging Worlds” articulates the
shape of this new disciplinary paradigm. is retheorization of
culture continues our tradition of pushing the boundaries of
Anthropology, including productive cross-disciplinary
conversations with the humanities and humanistic social sciences.
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DOCTORATE
n their first year of the program students enroll in a team taught, two quarter intensive core
theory seminar and a course in ethnographic methods or practice. In addition to these
courses,
they participate in the departmental colloquia and
proseminars and work closely with their
faculty advisor to develop their dissertation prospectus. In their second and third years,
students are able to take topical courses both within and outside the department and, in
consultation with their faculty committee, have considerable freedom to design their own
program of study.
In the spring quarter of their third year, students take Qualifying Examinations prior to
advancing to candidacy for the Ph.D. and embarking on a sustained fieldwork project. Students
are expected to complete their dissertations within a year of finishing field research.
In addition to the Qualifying Exams students are expected to:
- pass a first-year review of their written work
- take three additional 5-credit courses in anthropology (excluding independent study courses)
- maintain satisfactory academic progress
- fulfill the ethnographic writing requirement and the foreign language requirement
- meet the specific requirements of the Graduate Division
Graduate students may obtain a parenthetical notation on their anthropology Ph.D. certificate indicating that they
have specialized in Feminist Studies or Latin American and Latino Studies if they meet the requirements of the sponsoring department.
For full details of degree requirements, and other aspects of the anthropology graduate program, please see
the Anthropology Graduate Handbook.