Anthropology
A podcast by Oxford University
Categories:
264 Episodes
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The evolutionary history and genetics of primate brain size
Published: 5/10/2012 -
Dept Seminar: Beyond 'terroir'
Published: 11/29/2011 -
Dept Seminar: Discovering Anthropological Practice through Fieldwork
Published: 11/29/2011 -
Dept Seminar: Saints of Justice, Spirits of Devastation
Published: 11/29/2011 -
Dept Seminar: The Oil Company, 'Partnership' and the Moralities of Giving and Receiving
Published: 11/29/2011 -
Dept Seminar: Spirit in Motion
Published: 11/29/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Autopathographies - How 'sick lit' shapes knowledge and the illness experience
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Oxford's 'Two Bodies' in Medical Anthropology
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Healing earth and sacred clay among the Mun, SW Ethiopia
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Moving from Efficacy to Safety
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Maize, Men and New Medical Models
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Building Partnerships - a career path in research coordination and capacity building
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: Beyond Language - Public Health Policy and Cultural Competency
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Medical Anthropology at Oxford: 10 Years at the Intersections - opening comments
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Human Sciences Symposium 2011: The Impact of Exceptional Early Cognitive Environments on Musical Development
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Human Sciences Symposium 2011: The Musical Brain - Opening Presentation
Published: 7/25/2011 -
Social evolution in primates and other animals
Published: 6/6/2011 -
Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behaviour
Published: 6/6/2011 -
Marett Memorial Lecture 2011: Beauty and the beast
Published: 6/6/2011 -
Dept Seminar: Heritage, hiking and the eradication of miracles
Published: 3/18/2011
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.