-
Share this
Teaching Culture
The purpose of this blog is to build a community of anthropologists interested in pedagogy and to provide them with a reputable source of information and a way to share news on teaching anthropology, publishing in the field, new innovations, and new books.Search
-
Recent Posts
- ESPERANZA SPEAKS: The Power of Ethnographic Storytelling
- Teaching Culture through Tourism: Agency, Authenticity, and Colonialism
- “We are not brains on sticks!” Teaching Anthropology with the Senses
- What online learning taught me about (online) teaching
- Solidarity in Protest: Highlighting Positive Social Change in Urban Costa Rica
Most Viewed
- Five Simple Steps for Helping Students Write Ethnographic Papers
- Eating Culture: Sample Student Assignments for the Anthropology of Food
- Teaching Anthropology of/through Games, Part 1
- Announcing ethnoGRAPHIC: A New Series
- A Teacher’s Review of Ancestral Lines: The Maisin of Papua New Guinea and the Fate of the Rainforest
Categories
Tag Archives: Hogwarts
Proposing a Harry Potter and Anthropology Course
My discussion last month centred on the emerging trend for developing disciplinary courses in concert with popular culture themes. The possibilities for relevant and insightful connections are as endless as the imaginations of fiction authors, screenwriters, musicians, and other artists. In this post, I want to delve deeply into a course at the intersection of popular culture and anthropology that certainly would have held my attention as an undergraduate. Here, I propose a Harry Potter and Anthropology course that uses Harry Potter as a gateway to discussions of the important themes of four-field anthropology. read more…