Anthropology

A podcast by Oxford University

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264 Episodes

  1. The seven moral rules found all around the world

    Published: 7/31/2018
  2. The Marett Memorial Lecture 2018. Individualism in the Wild: Oneness in Jivaroan Culture

    Published: 7/31/2018
  3. The promise of the (foreign) image: post-post-internet art from the Philippines (and other notes from the field)

    Published: 3/27/2018
  4. The concept of culture in cultural evolution

    Published: 3/27/2018
  5. Sustaining one another: enset, animals, and people in the southern highlands of Ethiopia

    Published: 3/27/2018
  6. Existential mobility, migrant imaginaries and multiple selves

    Published: 3/27/2018
  7. Words and Deeds - the Astor Visiting Lecture 19 October 2017

    Published: 3/27/2018
  8. Ebola: A biosocial journey

    Published: 3/27/2018
  9. Possible Futures - Robert Foley

    Published: 9/15/2017
  10. Possible Futures - Rebecca Sear

    Published: 9/15/2017
  11. Possible Futures - Peter Walsh

    Published: 9/15/2017
  12. Possible Futures - Charlotte Roberts

    Published: 9/15/2017
  13. Possible Futures

    Published: 9/15/2017
  14. Ebola Emergence is Predictable

    Published: 9/15/2017
  15. A War on People: The Drug War and the Hermeneutic Politics of Those who Resist it

    Published: 7/31/2017
  16. The Indian Village: Marx to Modi

    Published: 7/31/2017
  17. The Artist and the Stone: Ethnography of an Artistic Process

    Published: 7/31/2017
  18. A Brilliant Jewel: Celibacy and its Malcontents in the Brazilian Catholic Church

    Published: 7/31/2017
  19. Formalization as Development: Accounting for the Proliferation of Village Savings Associations

    Published: 7/31/2017
  20. ‘I Can Feel the Mafia but I Can’t See it’: Investigatory Dilemma in Present-day Trapani

    Published: 7/31/2017

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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.