Anthropology Home

Women conversing in Cairo. Photo by Sophie Peterson.Chair's Welcome

Why Anthropology?

Personally, I came to anthropology because of a single course I took in my junior year. It opened my eyes to seeing the world in a new way. People I thought were primitive turned out to be sophisticated thinkers, artists and producers. Things I thought were natural and universal turned out to be learned, and things I thought were separate turned out to be connected.  I learned of a scientific method that learned from people, not only about them. The world turned out to be smaller, in terms of interconnectivity, but larger in terms of human potential.

These are the kinds of classes I hope we are offering to our students in the department of Anthropology.

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Our Mission

Miami's anthropology program focuses on undergraduate education. Straddling the hard sciences, social sciences and the humanities, we strive to give students a solid liberal arts background in conjunction with strong research experience and a broad perspective on the human condition. More than 30 percent of anthropology students go on to law, business, or graduate programs. Others have gone on to successful careers in business, teaching, marketing, conservation and many other fields.

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Contact Us

To learn more about anthropology at Miami, contact us. We're happy to arrange a tour, or tell you more about out current events and activities. Visit our departmental advisor(spielbjk@muohio.edu) to talk about majoring in Anthropology.

Recent Events

9/18/2009

“There are many ways to think about globalization,” John Cinnamon told an audience at Miami Hamilton Downtown Sept. 18, “The point is to recognize the broad connections that exist both across the planet and locally.” 

8/25/2009

Fourteen students traveled Aug. 24th to Thailand and then to India with anthropologiy professors Deborah Akers and Humayun Sidky as part of Miami's first...

7/29/2009

Linda Marchant, professor and chair of anthropology at Miami University, worked with researchers from the UK, Canada, Japan, Spain, France and Italy to co-author an article in the July 16 issue of Nature magazine that provides, for the first time, a comparative framework for understanding the biological, environmental and social contexts of...

4/25/2009

Studies of chimpanzees in captivity have suggested that most of these apes prefer to use either their right or left hands. But a study of water collection holes along an African river by wild chimpanzees indicates that, unlike people, these apes don’t have a preference for using either the right or left hand on manual tasks,...

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