We are one of the fastest growing departments with nearly 200 majors. With the largest undergraduate-only anthropology program in North Carolina and the third largest program overall (behind UNC Chapel Hill and Duke University), we offer both B.S. and B.A. degrees in several fields of anthropology. Despite the small number of faculty (10 full time tenure-track faculty [3 full professors, 2 associate professors, 5 assistant professors], 1 visiting assistant professor and 1 senior lecturer), the Department ranks #4 in the College of Arts & Sciences for amount of degrees produced and #4 for amount of majors per tenure line faculty.
FAST FACTS ABOUT THE DEPARTMENT
The Department of Anthropology is committed to a comparative and holistic approach to the study of the human experience. The anthropological perspective provides a broad understanding of the origins as well as the meaning of physical and cultural diversity in the world - past, present, and future. As such, the program in anthropology offers the opportunity for understanding world affairs and problems within the total context of the human experience and for constructing solutions to world problems which are firmly grounded in that context. Cultural anthropologists study people and their cultural practices and beliefs both within and outside of the United States as well as the topics of identity, power, inequality, and social praxis. Archaeologists study the material culture of past peoples in order to reconstruct their cultures, traditions, and practices in order to understand both what came before and how this may help us understand the present. Biological anthropologists study primate evolution and behavioral ecology, human biological variation, biocultural adaptations, bioarchaeology, and human paleontology. Together, we strive to understand both past and present variation in human societies. [ Why study anthropology? ]
News
Dr. Alice P. Wright received a $6000 Franklin Grant from the American Philosophical Society to support the Pinson Environment and Archaeology Regional Landscapes Project (PEARL)
Anthropology alumni from Appalachian State Continue continue to remain competitive and gain entrance into graduate programs across the world.
Anthropology majors continue to find success in researching topics typically covered by health sciences. Ali Newsome helps break the mold.
Alumni spotlights
After graduation, I moved out to Denver to serve as an Americorps volunteer in the National Civilian Community Corps. It was the best decision I ever made and a fantastic adventure.
Faculty spotlights
Gwen Robbins Schug is a bioarchaeologist interested in paleopathology, paleodemography, long bone ontogeny, bone histology, and South Asian prehistory.
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