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Ethnicity, Migration and Nationalism - ANTH223
This unit introduces students to the anthropology of the nation, ethnicity, and identity. The fundamental questions of this unit are why individuals identify with a particular group, what such identification means, and why claims about it (for example, by national governments) carry authority. The unit begins by examining how ideas about nation, ethnicity, and race were historically formed both in societies and in scholarship on societies. It then proceeds to deal with forms of ethnic identification that defy the idea of equating nation with territory. These include diasporas—groups that have left an historical homeland but continue to identify with it—and transnational communities, whose belonging and social practice is defined by several nation states rather than one. Finally, the unit looks at how nation states and non-territorial forms of belonging relate to each other, and what implications this has for citizenship in the contemporary world.
| Credit Points: | 3 |
| When Offered: | D1 - Day; Offered in Session 1, North Ryde |
| Staff Contact(s): | Dr Jaap, Anthropology Staff |
| Prerequisites: |
ANTH150 or 12cp or admission to GDipArts or permission of Executive Dean of Faculty
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| Corequisites: | |
| NCCW(s): | ANTH272 |
| Unit Designation(s): | |
| Unit Type: | |
| Assessed As: | Graded |
| Offered By: | Department of Anthropology Faculty of Arts |
Timetable Information
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