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Welcome
to the Beloit College Department of Anthropology.
Anthropology
is the study of human cultural diversity as it has developed over time
and across space, as well as in relation to biology and the environment.
Anthropologists integrate perspectives from the other social sciences,
humanities, and natural sciences. What unites our discipline is a reliance
on theory regarding social behavior and biological evolution. Within this
framework, Beloit College students acquire both breadth and depth in anthropology.
Excellence
and Distinctiveness
More
anthropology Ph.D.s earned their undergraduate degrees at Beloit than
at any other four-year liberal arts college not connnected to a university.
These alumni and many others in a wide variety of fields attribute much
of their success to their Beloit anthropology experience. Many factors
contribute to Beloit's strength in anthropology:
-
No other college of our type has an anthropology museum similar in scope,
depth, or quality to the Logan Museum. Rarely are undergraduates able
to work directly with, and conduct research in, collections of this
quality.
- Beloit
maintains a tradition of anthropological study dating to the early 20th
century, long before most other institutions included it in their curricula.
- Students
engage in field schools, museum programs, faculty projects, and independent
studies, and this hands-on involvement was customary at Beloit long
before undergraduate research became fashionable in higher education.
- The
nature of anthropology as a discipline coheres with the overall strengths
of Beloit College. Anthropology and the College both emphasize learning
that is interdisciplinary, experiential, and global.
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