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Department of Social Anthropology

 
Read more at: Postgraduate Open Day, Tuesday November 5th
Photo: 'Graduation Performance of Mongolian Dance Students' by Gol Tengis (2024)

Postgraduate Open Day, Tuesday November 5th

“Graduation Performance of Mongolian Dance Students” Photo by PhD candidate Gol Tengis, Postgradute Photography Celebrations. Interested in pursuing an MPhil or PhD in Social Anthropology? Join us for a virtual presentation on Tuesday November 5 th from 13:00 – 13:45 where we will describe our postgraduate programs and...


Read more at: PhD Student’s Project Shortlisted for International Responsible Investment Award

PhD Student’s Project Shortlisted for International Responsible Investment Award

A project analysing informal and formal work practices in Latin America produced by Alejandro Porcel Arraut – a SocAnth PhD student since 2022 – was shortlisted for the United Nations PRI Awards 2024. alejandro_450x300.png The PRI – the letters stand for Principles for Responsible Investment – is a UN-supported network of...


Read more at: Prestigious Cover-Art Commission for Cambridge Anthropology PhD Student

Prestigious Cover-Art Commission for Cambridge Anthropology PhD Student

One of our Research Students has produced the cover art for a recent issue of the New York Review of Books . The student is Julien Porquet – who, under the name Julien Posture , has provided illustrations for numerous publications, including The New Yorker , The Atlantic , The New York Times Book Review and The Guardian ...


Read more at: New course in Anthropology at the University of Cambridge is open for applications

New course in Anthropology at the University of Cambridge is open for applications

The Department of Social Anthropology is pleased to announce that a new part time course in Anthropology at the Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge is open for applications. The Undergraduate Certificate in Anthropology is open to all applicants from around the world and taught by lecturers from the...


Read more at: Winner of the Sue Benson Prize 2024 - Jezz Brown

Winner of the Sue Benson Prize 2024 - Jezz Brown

Every year, the Department awards a prize of £200 to the most outstanding IIB dissertation. The prize is named in memory of Dr Sue Benson (1948-2005), an anthropologist who lectured, supervised and directed studies in Cambridge for 26 years and who was an inspiration, both personally and intellectually for generations of...


Read more at: Introducing the winner of the Postgraduate Photographic Celebrations 2024
Juliette Gautron: ‘Collecting coca leaves’

Introducing the winner of the Postgraduate Photographic Celebrations 2024

Interview with Juliette Gautron, PhD candidate in social anthropology, and the winner of the 2024 postgraduate photography competition.


Read more at: First in-depth analysis published of the Cultural Revolution in Inner Mongolia
A Chinese Rebel beyond the Great Wall: The Cultural Revolution and Ethnic Pogrom in Inner Mongolia

First in-depth analysis published of the Cultural Revolution in Inner Mongolia

Pioneering account draws on the eyewitness recollections of a Chinese rebel participant When the Cultural Revolution reached China’s border region of Inner Mongolia in 1966, it caused the largest pogrom ever experienced in the People’s Republic. Mao’s class struggle injunctions exacerbated Chinese-Mongol ethnic conflicts...


Read more at: Cambridge Journal of Anthropology grows after international re-launch

Cambridge Journal of Anthropology grows after international re-launch

Department’s in-house journal opens up conversations about definition of ‘good’ anthropology . The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology (CJA) (formerly ‘Cambridge Anthropology’) is a vital part of the Department’s research environment. This in-house publication has grown and thrived since its re-launch as an international...


Read more at: What was it like to do fieldwork in 1950s Mexico?

What was it like to do fieldwork in 1950s Mexico?

Susan Drucker-Brown was one of the first women anthropologists in Mexico. ‘A Woman in the Field. The Photographs and Fieldnotes of Susan Drucker-Brown’ (22 April – 31 May 2024) explored the everyday life of her pioneering ethnographic research in the Mixtec-speaking village of Jamiltepec, in the southern state of Oaxaca...


Read more at: ‘Lonely Funerals’ symposium to shape future scholarship and policy

‘Lonely Funerals’ symposium to shape future scholarship and policy

Who are the people who look after you when you die? What happens when there isn’t anyone able or willing to arrange the funeral? These are some of the critical questions posed by Dr Sally Raudon, ESRC postdoctoral fellow, whose doctoral research focused on Hart Island, New York City, the largest public cemetery in the US...