Bilinda Straight
Moore Hall 1001; Tel:
387-0409
Email:
Bilinda.Straight@wmich.edu
Web Page: http://homepages.wmich.edu/~bstraigh
ANTH 6090: Ethnohistory
The purpose of this graduate
seminar in Ethnohistory is to examine the scope of ethnohistoric theory, method, and practice from an
anthropological perspective. The seminar is a required course for the Ethnohistory Graduate Certificate Program. Although there
remains some debate as to whether Ethnohistory
constitutes a separate field of study, practitioners share the realization that
benefits obtain through the use of multiple lines of evidence to study history
and culture. Ethnohistorians recognize that
documents, archaeological findings, oral histories, and ethnographies can be
profitably compared, contrasted, and integrated to elucidate the histories and
cultural contexts of groups that have been conventionally ignored in historical
accounts. Thus, interdisciplinary study is incumbent in ethnohistory
as a means of examining both non-Western societies as well as subaltern voices
of those who have been written out of traditional histories. Moreover, by
juxtaposing multiple lines of evidence, the ethnohistorian
can at once examine the distant and the local, the general and the particular,
to bring human experience into better focus.
Armed with theoretical
perspectives that foreground the experiences of such populations, along with
the methodological tools that can elucidate process and event, structure and
action, ethnohistorians can turn their gaze on a near
infinite range of issues anywhere in the world. Fertile areas of inquiry have
included the cultures and histories of peoples on all continents, often but not
exclusively in the post-Columbian era. The seminar will help us to examine the
practical parameters and challenges of Ethnohistory
so that we may begin to practice it ourselves.
Required Books
¯
James, Wendy (eds). The Qualities of Time.
¯
Comaroff, Jean.
Body of Power, Spirit of Resistance.
¯
Cole,
Jennifer. Forget Colonialism?
¯
Coursepack,
available at Dollar Bill.
Grading (See Grading Key for complete
instructions)
Attendance/Participation 15% Reading Abstracts 25%
Annotated Bibliography 20%
Research Essay 40%
Attendance/Participation
(15% of grade)
In a class of this kind and size, your presence and participation are essential to the quality of the experience for others as well as yourself. Your attendance grade will be based on the number of days you are absent, calculated as points missed on a one-hundred percent scale. Participation will weigh in here but no one will be penalized for shyness.
Reading Abstracts
(25% of grade)
Each week, you will write critical responses (approximately one page) to ALL readings for that week (25% of grade). These responses should help you frame your questions and participation in discussions. Although these are not formal essays, they must be typed, and are expected to be critical commentaries that reflect your understanding and response to the reading. You must write about all of the readings for the week in your weekly response. Grades will be 0 (not turned in on time); 1 (equal to 75 pts.—more effort was needed); 2 (equal to 85 pts.—good); 3 (equal to 95 pts—excellent); 4 (100 pts—outstanding). All written work in this class will be graded based on content, style, and mechanics.
Annotated Bibliography (20% of grade):
This will be an essay and annotated bibliography of sources you are using for your research project. Begin with an introduction that includes the thesis statement or argument you will be pursuing. Discuss the kinds of material and evidence you will use to pursue your argument. Next, provide a one-paragraph summary for each of 5 sources, and a sentence or two of how they should be useful to your project. Include full bibliographic information for each of these sources, and do not include course readings! Course readings should be used for your project where appropriate but do not count towards this assignment. You must use at least one book. Web sources are not allowed (except for downloaded articles from scholarly journals available online). DUE OCTOBER 20th
Final Project (40% of grade):
This will be a major research paper (15-20 pp) on a topic of your choosing that employs methods and practices developed in this course. Ideally, you will select a topic with which you are already familiar, particularly one that will assist you in completing your program requirements.
Citation Format: Include a bibliography for anything you cite. When you cite, quote, or paraphrase in text, put an in-text citation in parentheses (authorÕs last name, date, page number if a direct quote). It looks like this: (Straight 1997) for citation or paraphrase, (Straight 1997: 37) for direct quote. You should always cite when you are drawing upon someoneÕs research or ideas. If you conduct any of your own interviews, you should create pseudonyms for your respondents and cite quotations from those interviews like this (Miller interview, 2002).
Bilinda
StraightÕs
Grading Key
All
letter grades are converted into a quantitative grade (see key below). All quantitative semester grades are
multiplied by the percentage of the spread they represent. Thus, if attendance is worth 20% of the
grade, it would be calculated as follows:
If you were absent 3 times out of 30 total class days, 3 out of 30 is 10
percent absence, or 90% presence. So you have a 90 on attendance, multiplied by
20% of the spread, gives you 18. All grades thus calculated are added together
to equal the total percentage out of one hundred. Your semester grade is then calculated
as per the key below.
Grade Scale for Final Grades
97-100 A+
94-96 A
87-93 BA
84-86 B
77-83 CB
74-76 C
67-73 DC
60-66 D
below 60 E
Shepard Krech III (CP)
Bernard S. Cohn (CP)
Introduction to Qualities of Time
Gold (CP)
Donham, plus Comaroff response, Week 3 (CP)
ComaroffÕs Body of
Power, Spirit of Resistance: Read half for Week 3, half for Week 4
Wolf (CP)
Megersa and Kassam in Qualities
Dilley in Qualities
Straight, in Qualities
Chalcraft, in Qualities
Lane, in Qualities
Watts, in Qualities
Wingfield, in Qualities
Film
Fardon, in Qualities
Bolton, in Qualities
ANNOTATED BIB DUE
TODAY IN CLASS
Marx (CP)
Taussig (CP)
Pierre Bourdieu (CP)
Foucault (2 book excerpts, CP)
Connerton (CP)
Ricoeur (CP)
Cole, Forget Colonialism? Read first half.
Cole, Forget Colonialism? Read second half
Wengrow, in Qualities
Straight (CP)
NO CLASS November 24th (Thanksgiving)
NO CLASS December 1st (AAA)
Research Projects due Finals Week.