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Dec 04, 2024
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SOAN 297 - Introduction to Indigenous Americas This course offers an overview of indigenous groups in North and South America, including the history of indigenous people and the struggles of particular groups today. As with other anthropology courses, an emphasis is placed on understanding native perspectives. Although the course does not exhaustively cover all of the hundreds of Native American groups in the Americas, it does include discussion of groups in a variety of regions, such as the Midwest (including Mississippian culture), the U.S. eastern seaboard, the U.S. Southwest, the North American Great Plains, Alaska, Mesoamerica, the Andean Highlands, the Amazon, and South America’s Gran Chaco. As a 200-level class in the anthropology track of the major, this course is also designed to help build critical-thinking skills.
Credits: 3 When Offered: (fall only) NOTE:
* This course fulfills the Social Scientific Mode of Inquiry and the Intercultural Interconnecting Perspective of the Liberal Studies Program.
** This course counts toward the 63-hour Liberal Arts and Sciences (LAS) graduation requirement.
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