Anthropology
A podcast by Oxford University
Categorie:
264 Episodio
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The dawn of Darwinian critical care medicine
Pubblicato: 8/6/2016 -
Maternal capital and offspring development
Pubblicato: 8/6/2016 -
Tracing the origins of the HIV/AIDS pandemic
Pubblicato: 8/6/2016 -
Agrarian change, climate stress and shifting class relations in the Nepal-Bihar borderlands
Pubblicato: 1/6/2016 -
Marett Memorial Lecture 2016: The Creole world between inequality and difference
Pubblicato: 1/6/2016 -
Paying attention to the journey
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Does 21st-century technology change the experience of early pregnancy and miscarriage?
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Birds in heaven: social positioning of lost babies and their mothers in Qatar
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Microbes and other spirits
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Revisiting uncertainty: provisional electricity infrastructure and livelihoods in an African city
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Negotiating enemy lines
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Medical and psychological issues in the treatment of recurrent miscarriage
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Crossing religious borders: Jewish Cabo Verdeans
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
'Fat knowledge', epigenetics and the enchantment of relational biology
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
Evolutionary origins of technological behaviour: a primate archaeology approach to chimpanzees
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
The 'Unfortunate Mesopotamian Foetus'
Pubblicato: 14/3/2016 -
The Limits of collaboration: attempting a reciprocal Gypsy/Roman life story
Pubblicato: 4/8/2015 -
Mary Douglas Memorial Lecture 2015: The Societalization of Social Problems
Pubblicato: 4/8/2015 -
Stacking Ontologies: Mundane Technoscience in the Silk Mill
Pubblicato: 27/5/2015 -
Obsessed by Love: Erotic Magic, Delirious Love and Female Power in Mozambique
Pubblicato: 27/5/2015
The Oxford Anthropology Podcast brings together talks by internationally renowned scholars and cutting edge researchers. Their lectures explore a wide range of human experience and feature case studies from around the world. We are grateful to the speakers and staff and students from the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography who have made this podcast possible.