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ANTH 4309

ANTH 4309 Anthropology of Hunting (3-0). Hunting remains an important part of human lives and a component of our ecological footprint since deep in our evolutionary history. Although some aspects of hunting have not changed, others have varied radically across space and through time. However accurate, modern popular perceptions of ancient hunters also have profound political ramifications, impacting human-environmental dynamics and even displacing Indigenous hunters from ancestral lands. In this class the student will study the origins of hunting, how it has changed with hominin evolution, how the adoption of new technologies impacts hunting, how different hunting methods are used in different environments and by diverse cultures, the ecological implications of human predation, and the contentious topic of hunting in a modernizing world. Prerequisites: ANTH 1301 and ANTH 1302.


Fall 2024


Anthropology of Hunting   Section 001   Devin Pettigrew
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