Department of Anthropology spacer Northern Illinois University
Calendar Phone Book Campus Map Search A-Z Index
black line
Home People Programs Research News

Student on a bike


Archaeology

Cultural

Linguistics

Physical

Applied

Cognitive Science

Museology

 

dot

Cultural Anthropology

Cultural anthropologists broadly study the shared and negotiated meanings that different groups of people learn and use to interpret experience. Culture generates much of human social behavior, and anthropologists study shifts in meaning and social patterns through fieldwork (ethnography) in contemporary societies and by comparing the historical and ongoing changes within and between societies (ethnology). As the primary means for human survival, culture is also grounded in how our species adapts to our physical and social environments. Cultural anthropologists seek to describe and explain similarities and differences among diverse forms of cultural adaptation, including beliefs, behaviors, and experiences.

Current research and teaching interests among the cultural anthropology faculty focus on the revitalization of Buddhism, transformations in gender roles, the interrelationship between religious practices and politico-economic changes, transnational identities, applied anthropology, medical anthropology and public health, the environment, intensification of agriculture and food systems, sports culture, corporate culture, maritime and economic anthropology, and globalization theory. The program emphasizes the importance of empirical, ethnographic research in both the undergraduate and graduate program. The faculty specialize in the cultures of Southeast Asia, Oceania, Scandinavia, Africa, and the United States.

The cultural anthropology program is closely linked to the linguistic anthropology program and the applied anthropology program. Students have the opportunity to work closely with individual faculty in developing their research topics in collaboration with other subdisciplines within anthropology and/or other departments. The faculty have international consulting experience with such agencies as the United Nations Development Program, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the Asian Development Bank, U.S. Agency for International Development, United Nations Population Fund, the International Council for Science, and various international non-governmental organizations concerned with development. They also have served as local consultants to state and federal governmental agencies, grassroot non-profit groups, environmental organizations, and international cross-cultural training institutes. Field schools in Hawaii, the rural Midwestern U.S., and Cambodia have been conducted by cultural anthropology faculty in the last few years. A number of other undergraduate and graduate students have benefited from more individualized instruction by accompanying professors on research projects locally and in Cambodia, Thailand, and the Philippines.


Research in Southeast Asia

 

 
spacer
Department of Anthropology
Northern Illinois University
DeKalb, IL 60115
Phone: (815) 753-0246
Fax: (815) 753-7027

Departmental Chair: Dr. Judy Ledgerwood (jledgerw@niu.edu)
Departmental Secretary: Ms. Kathy Truman (ktruman@niu.edu)
Webmaster: Dr. Michael Kolb (aloha@niu.edu)