The Social Lives of Things: The Anthropology of Art and Material Culture
This seminar surveys anthropological
theories of art and material culture with a
cross-cultural purview and a concentration
on global Indigenous societies in colonial and
contemporary times. We will examine
numerous disciplinary approaches—
functional, symbolic/semiotic/structuralist,
aesthetic, economic, historical, and
political—to the study of objects, and
discuss ways of bringing them into
articulation, both with one another and with
Indigenous perspectives. After a brief
historical introduction to early
anthropological theories of decorative art
and exchange, the class will focus on
contemporary approaches framed around
such key concepts as cultural biography,
objectification, materiality, social agency, art
worlds, cultural and intercultural production,
colonial economies, Indigenous ontologies,
cultural brokerage, regimes of value, tourist
art, “primitive” art, and the politics of
representation and cultural property.
Students will apply the range of approaches
to a single object or discrete set of objects
throughout the semester as a way to test the
theories in practice. The course prepares
students to bring a wide array of theoretical
and methodological perspectives to the
study of things—from tools to clothes, from
souvenirs to fine arts—among diverse global
cultural communities. 3 credits. May satisfy
the geocultural requirement, depending on
the final project.