
ANTHY207-23A (HAM)
Magic, Witchcraft and Religion
15 Points
Staff
Convenor(s)
Fraser Macdonald
9315
J.2.08A
fraser.macdonald@waikato.ac.nz
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Administrator(s)
Librarian(s)
You can contact staff by:
- Calling +64 7 838 4466 select option 1, then enter the extension.
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- For extensions starting with 4: dial +64 7 838 extension.
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What this paper is about
ritual that human groups fashion their laws, morals, art, philosophy, indeed, the cultural frameworks within which they live meaningful
lives. This course is an anthropological investigation into the topic of religion and considers how religious beliefs and practices are expressed in a wide range of areas including witchcraft and sorcery, cosmology and origin stories, death and the afterlife, healing and many others. We will also look at topics that are deeply significant to the contemporary world, such as religious fundamentalism and violence, as well as trends toward secularisation and irrelgion. In addition to examining these various topics within the anthropology of religion, students will also be introduced to historic and contemporary theoretical trends within this field of knowledge and be shown how anthropological understandings of what religion is and what it means to people have undergone considerable change from the emergence of the discipline to the present day. As students will see, anthropologists are taking the spiritual and religious worlds of indigenous peoples increasingly seriously, with many no longer reducing them to made up worlds of cultural belief but rather appreciating them as compeltely different worlds with diffierent possibilities for reality.
How this paper will be taught
The course will operate across three main activities.
(1) Firstly, course content will be delivered in a single, two hour lecture each week. Students are strongly encourgaged to attend lectures in person but in the event they are unable to attend, the lectures will be recorded on Panopto and made accessible on the course Moodle page.
(2) Secondly, students are required to attend a one hour tutorial class taken by the course tutor. These classes will serve two main aims. Firstly, they will be used to reiterate and clarify the key points from the videos. Secondly, they will be used to facilitate discussion of the readings assigned for that week. As such, students are expected to arrive to class having completed the assigned readings and should be fully prepared to enter into a productive and critical discussion about them with their classmates. The tutorial classes will also be an important place for students to receive more detailed information about assessment items. Students will sign up for these classes in the first week of the semester. These classes will take place face to face during the scheduled times but any students unable to attend these face to face classes will attend a one hour online Zoom tutorial as an equivalent.
Required Readings
Learning Outcomes
Students who successfully complete the course should be able to:
Assessments
How you will be assessed
The internal assessment/exam ratio (as stated in the University Calendar) is 100:0. There is no final exam.