This ethnographic field school is a 5 week program designed for students in anthropology and related fields of the humanities, social sciences, and Latin American studies programs. This program combines a great variety of topics in cultural anthropology and ethnography. Students are asked to design a research agenda and conduct this research in Chan Kom, a contemporary Maya peasant community.
Train students in ethnographic methods.
Familiarize students with the peasant-rural background of Yucatan, Mexico.
Exercise the anthropological principles of "cultural relativism" and "holism."
The field school comprises two major programs: academic and anthropological research.
Students are asked to identify a research focus in order to build their agendas and undertake their ethnographies in Chan Kom. Students may choose from a great variety of topics. Following is a list of possible ethnographic topics:
Environment and urban development
Labor and migration
Ecotourism
Education
Peasant economy
Effects of out-migration
Gender dynamic in peasant society
Students, with the field school's director, will organize a program to teach English in the community.
This Summer Ethnographic Field School requires home-stays with families in the community, in order to facilitate students’ immersion in the culture, which greatly assists them with the basic cultural understanding that their research agendas requires.
Students will receive 3 credits for the field school. They will need to register for:
ANTH 4610.090 Ethnographic Field School (3 credits)
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