Norms, Networks, and Repertoires: The Anthropology of Institutions

ANTHROPOLOGY 5312

We live our lives in social institutions: schools, courts, offices, hospitals, churches, and so forth, each one shaped by norms or rules, in which people form networks and draw on their repertoires for social action. Anthropologists and sociologists study institutions through ethnography, the close study of everyday interactions, albeit also incorporating approaches from politics and economics, and largely shaped by the traditions of social pragmatism. We explore the theoretical and empirical dimensions of an ethnographic and pragmatist approach through readings of Goffman, Foucault, and Bourdieu, and of more recent analyses of schools, courtrooms, immigration police, science laboratories, art, and other institutions.
Course Attributes:

Section 01

Norms, Networks, and Repertoires: The Anthropology of Institutions
INSTRUCTOR: Bowen
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