Anthropology

En podcast av Oxford University

Kategorier:

264 Avsnitt

  1. Negotiating Space, Buying Time

    Publicerades: 2012-06-27
  2. What Shan ethnography can tell us about Theravada Buddhism

    Publicerades: 2012-06-27
  3. Conflict in the Plural

    Publicerades: 2012-06-27
  4. Opportunistic violence and the impossibility of intimacy

    Publicerades: 2012-06-27
  5. Neighbouring China in Northern Nepal

    Publicerades: 2012-06-27
  6. Marett Memorial Lecture 2012: Anthropologists and the Bible

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  7. Altruism in cyberspace?

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  8. Beyond globalisation and localisation

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  9. The 'down side' of assisted reproductive technologies

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  10. Meat and Health

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  11. Brain microcircuits in champanzees and humans

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  12. Venom, pollinators and parasites

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  13. Extreme climatic events as drivers of early human behaviour in Africa?

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  14. How niche construction affects inheritance systems in human evolution

    Publicerades: 2012-05-24
  15. Implementing a Research Culture in the NHS. Medical Anthropology at Oxford

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10
  16. The self-management of misfortune by use of amulets and charms. Ethnicity and Identity Seminar

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10
  17. There is no such thing as Dian cuisine. Anthropology Departmental Seminar

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10
  18. Don't throw the baby out with the bathos. Anthropology Departmental Seminar:

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10
  19. On the concept of cultural transmission. Anthropology Departmental Seminar

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10
  20. Re-Defining the Museal Object in Mao and post-Mao China. Anthropology Departmental Seminar

    Publicerades: 2012-05-10

10 / 14

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.

Visit the podcast's native language site