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Students
Tuition Fee
USD 23,473
Per year
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
On campus
Duration
36 months
Program Facts
Program Details
Degree
Foundation
Major
Museum Studies | Social Science
Discipline
Humanities
Minor
Cultural Anthropology | Cultural Resource Management and Policy Analysis
Education type
On campus
Timing
Full time
Course Language
English
Tuition Fee
Average International Tuition Fee
USD 23,473
Intakes
Program start dateApplication deadline
2023-09-18-
2023-05-02-
2023-09-262023-07-17
2024-01-16-
About Program

Program Overview


Course overview

This is a four-year degree at Goldsmiths. If you successfully achieve the progression requirements of the foundation year, you can continue with the full-time three-year BA (Hons) Anthropology degree.





Why study the Integrated Degree in Anthropology at Goldsmiths

  • All you need is an interest in Anthropology – there aren’t any formal entry requirements.
  • You’ll learn about anthropology, human society and the difference between cultures, as well as globalisation and visual anthropology. You’ll explore relevant political, economic and social anthropological themes (including money, work and consumption; nation, place and migration; race and ethnicity, sex and gender; violence; and fundamentalism).
  • You’ll develop key study skills on a dedicated course throughout the programme.
  • If you successfully achieve the progression requirements for the course, you'll be able to progress onto Year 1 of our

    BA Anthropology

    degree, and really delve into the specifics of the subject.
  • You'll be learning from leading academics in the

    Department of Anthropology

    , which has been rated top 10 in the UK for anthropology in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2023.




  • The Open Book pathway

    You can also study this course through the

    Open Book pathway

    . This pathway offers additional support for people with a non-traditional background including offending, addiction and mental health, as well as those who have never truly considered further and higher education.





    Contact the department

    If you have specific questions about the degree, contact

    the Programme Convenor, Dr Justin Woodman

    .

    Program Outline


    Modules (traditional pathway)

    You will study the following modules:

    Module title Credits

    Ways into Anthropology


    Ways into Anthropology

    30 credits

    This module will introduce you to the key theoretical and methodological underpinnings of social anthropology, and to the debates that have been central to the discipline.

    You’ll explore the history and theories of the subject such as religion, communication and symbolism through a critical, inclusive and decolonising lens.

    You’ll be encouraged to reflect on your own experiences of everyday aspects of culture and society, and how many everyday social practices and institutions shape our sense of collective identity and social status in the modern world. You’ll also examine how the colonial histories of societal practices and institutions continue to operate as sites of disjuncture and exclusion in creating, sustaining and social inequalities by making them appear as a ‘natural’ part of everyday life.

    You’ll examine the way public action, social justice movements, and local/indigenous forms of protest and activism have sought to liberate everyday understandings from racialised, prejudicial, and ethnocentric colonial assumptions. You’ll also address issues around the environment and sustainability, specifically in relation to exploring ideas about human relationships with other-than-human beings and things.

    30 credits

    Contemporary Issues in Anthropology


    Contemporary Issues in Anthropology

    30 credits

    This module will introduce you to the role and scope of anthropology in the modern world. Using accessible and contemporary examples of anthropological writing and research, you’ll explore how anthropology facilitates cross-cultural understanding of different ‘ways of seeing’, and the importance of this in an increasingly globalised context.

    You’ll learn how twenty-first-century anthropological research addresses how all human societies participate in wide networks of social relationships under a dominant global capitalist economy. You’ll consider the role of anthropological research and examine how anthropologists approach our global world, as reflective and politically engaged researchers.

    You’ll explore anthropology in an interdisciplinary way, looking at political, economic and social issues whilst gaining a strong foundation in the ethnographic and theoretical foundations of Anthropology.

    This module will be delivered primarily via online and blended learning.

    30 credits

    Doing Anthropology: Methods and Ethics


    Doing Anthropology: Methods and Ethics

    15 credits

    This module will introduce you to a range of interdisciplinary research methodologies, with a focus on qualitative anthropological and social research.

    You’ll engage with critical debates using examples taken from contemporary research occurring within Goldsmiths. Topics include what constitutes ethical, inclusive, decolonised and sustainable research practice, the importance of methodologies produced from within indigenous anthropologies, as well as exploring how research methods and their outcomes can be employed in social justice advocacy and in relation to providing solutions to pressing global contemporary social issues around indigenous rights, consumption and the environment, and the use of social research methods by the military.

    You’ll gain practice-based skills through a range of group-oriented research exercises as preparation for using anthropological methods in your own independent research. This will also include digital and audio-visual research, expanding your visual, media and digital cultures skills.

    15 credits

    Studying Anthropology


    Studying Anthropology

    15 credits

    This module will enable you to develop inter-disciplinary academic and independent research skills needed for degree-level study. The course links academic skills such as time management and note-taking, with the anthropological topics and issues covered in the programme.

    You’ll not only learn to ‘think anthropologically', but to engage critically and thoughtfully with academic theory and research from other disciplines, and express a range of issues in a clear, concise, and articulate manner.

    15 credits

    Visual Media and Digital Cultures


    Visual Media and Digital Cultures

    15 credits

    This will introduce you to visual anthropology and the anthropology of art. You’ll examine anthropological and interdisciplinary perspectives on the contemporary significance of digital and social media, branding and advertising, marketing, and material culture.

    You’ll explore the ways in which anthropologists have employed visual media in documenting the communities they study. You’ll gain a more nuanced understanding of cultural differences through engagement with visual outputs like film and video, from a variety of global, cultural contexts.

    The module also addresses some of the ways we’re able to ‘observe’ and participate in one another’s cultures and social lives. You’ll be encouraged to critically engage with a range of topical issues including:

  • Social media and care in the time of Covid-19.
  • Representation of cultural identities in an increasingly mediatised world.
  • Advertising, branding and consumerism in the media.
  • Social media, politics and ‘fake news’.
  • Social media and political violence.
  • Representations of gender, sexuality, body and race in the media.
  • The role of the internet and social media in contemporary forms of activism, social justice and environmentalism.
  • 15 credits

    Short Research Project (Anthropology)


    Short Research Project (Anthropology)

    15 credits

    This module guides you through the processes of designing and completing a piece of individual research through online lectures and seminars. You'll engage in discussion of current anthropological and interdisciplinary research projects which will be introduced to you by members of the Anthropology department and visiting lecturers (including from the Royal College of Art).

    You'll have the opportunity to construct your own research question around an appropriate topic of your choice. You'll be supervised through individual tutorials, helping you to gain practical experience in key anthropological and interdisciplinary research skills.

    You can also explore the use of visual elements of anthropological and interdisciplinary research in your project where appropriate, such as the use of film and photography. You'll be encouraged to think critically about the conditions under which such images are produced.

    15 credits

    Individual tutorial support and academic guidance is given by the programme tutor. You'll also attend a study skills course as part of the programme.


    Teaching style

    This programme is mainly taught through scheduled learning - a mixture of lectures, seminars and workshops. You’ll also be expected to undertake a significant amount of independent study. This includes carrying out required and additional reading, preparing topics for discussion, and producing essays or project work.

    The following information gives an indication of the typical proportions of learning and teaching for each year of this programme*:

  • Year 1 - 20% scheduled learning, 80% independent learning
  • Year 2 - 18% scheduled learning, 82% independent learning
  • Year 3 - 13% scheduled learning, 87% independent learning
  • Year 4 - 14% scheduled learning, 86% independent learning

  • How you’ll be assessed

    You’ll be assessed by a variety of methods, depending on your module choices. These include coursework, examinations, group work and projects.

    The following information gives an indication of how you can typically expect to be assessed on each year of this programme*:

  • Year 1 - 100% coursework
  • Year 2 - 50% coursework, 50% written exam
  • Year 3 - 88% coursework, 13% practical
  • Year 4 - 100% coursework
  • *Please note that these are averages are based on enrolments for 2022/23. Each student’s time in teaching, learning and assessment activities will differ based on individual module choices.

    Download the

    programme specification

    . If you would like an earlier version of the programme specification, please contact the

    Quality Office

    .

    Please note that due to staff research commitments not all of these modules may be available every year.

    For 2021-22 and 2020–21, we have made some changes to how the teaching and assessment of certain programmes are delivered. To check what changes affect this programme, please visit the

    programme changes page

    .




    Skills

    If you successfully achieve the progression requirements of the foundation year, you can continue with the full-time three-year

    BA Anthropology

    , which will enable you to develop the following skills:

  • Communication skills (including public speaking, developing and presenting an argument, note taking, report writing)
  • Analytical thinking
  • Awareness of social, political and cultural processes
  • The particular set of skills associated with anthropology, including development of awareness of social and cultural difference, and learning to think ‘outside the box’, provides a good foundation for a number of career paths.


    Careers

    Our students have been successful in a range of areas, from postgraduate research and teaching in higher education, to film making and other media careers, journalism, and museum curating, to applied or advocacy work for NGOs and development agencies.

    Our particular emphasis on public anthropology encourages our students to explore options in a range of practice-based and public sector career paths. You can find out more about career paths after an Anthropology degree on our

    Anthropology careers page

    .

    Find out more about

    employability at Goldsmiths

    .


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