Economy and Culture provides tools for the understanding of economic activity as both a foundation and an expression of human and more-than-human sociality. It approaches material and cultural practice as inextricably linked in the shaping of the social and explains that linkage through the discussion of ethnographically grounded studies and theories. Practices of exchange and everyday behaviours characterised as irrational and spontaneous, rational and formal, magical and esoteric, or devilish and superstitious, will constitute the focus of this anthropological inquiry into the sociocultural premises of economic behaviour.
Unit details and rules
Academic unit | Anthropology |
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Credit points | 6 |
Prerequisites
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12 credit points at 2000 level in Anthropology |
Corequisites
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None |
Prohibitions
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ANTH2653 |
Assumed knowledge
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None |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | Yes |
Teaching staff
Coordinator | Michael Edwards, michael.edwards@sydney.edu.au |
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