Letter from the Editor | Katherine E. Cooper

Dear Readers,              First, I would like to welcome everyone to the first edition of Anthropos, the Anthropology department E-Publication. Anthropos has been a large endeavor, which could not have been possible without the support of the Emory Anthropology Department and the Emory Anthropology Student Society. When I was selected to be the Editor in Chief, …

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Interview with PhD Candidate, Tawni Tidwell | Matthew Whitwell

            For Anthropos’s first publication, I sat down with Ph.D. Student Tawni Tidwell, whose research is concerned with how Tibetan doctors learn to identify and diagnose diseases, specifically indigenous varieties of cancer. I organized our interview to learn about some of her experiences with conducting research, but it soon became evident that many of Tidwell’s …

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Interview with a Graduate Student, Hanne van der Iest | Mariam Qazilbash

           Life is hard. Adulthood is hard. These two go hand in hand, and always seem to be fast approaching in the life of an undergraduate. Undergraduates are under pressure to know their career path from day 1, but the truth is that isn’t always the case. In fact, many people …

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Poverty and the Imposition of Agency: Examining Constructions of Self Through the Lens of Invisiblized Self-Creation | Evan Kiely

Poverty results from an inherent loss of means, in the economic sense, but it goes far beyond that as well. This lack of means is coupled with a loss of access, the obvious being reduced access to healthcare, food, water, shelter, and/or any of the many areas recognized as fundamental human needs. The lack of …

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Hijras: The “Third Gender” of India | Pooja Gandhi

        India is often perceived as a close-minded, intolerant, and traditional environment where unique expressions of identity and self are negatively received. Despite its strong negations towards certain practices, the society’s view on hijras – transgender men to women who identify as a “third gender” – is ambiguous with both positive and …

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Sugar, Hegemony, and Power in British Culture: A State of Flux | Ricardo A. Pascual

Abstract:         This paper, based on Sidney Mintz’s Sweetness and Power (1985), was originally submitted as a requirement for the ANT-285W Concepts & Methods in Cultural Anthropology course taught by Dr. Michelle Parsons during the Spring 2015. Drawing on a historical materialist approach to sucrose, hegemony, and power in British culture found …

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Social Death, Biological Death, and the Space Between | Emma Neish

        A black gravestone adorned with roses and the words, “I kept my promise” is perhaps one of the more perplexing burial markers to appear in Sylvan Abbey Memorial Park. Underneath, lie the remains of Theresa Marie Schiavo- a 41 year old woman whose gravestone lists three dates, December 3rd  1963, February …

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The Human Niche: A Resultant of the Human Life Strategy and Subsequent Brain Co-Evolution | Naveed Noordin

        According to Caroline Ross (1998: 54), Head of the Department of Life Sciences at Roehampton University (UK), questions pertaining to life history strategies such why “a large animal takes longer to mature than does a small animal” and why “small animals that breed rapidly and develop early, have many young per …

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Creating a Lens | Srishti Malhotra

        Conducting fieldwork is the most important part of being an anthropologist. If anthropologists didn’t conduct fieldwork and immerse themselves completely in the culture, then they wouldn’t be able to understand the underlying concepts in a culture. My fieldwork is currently being conducted at the Washington Street Center located in Covington, Georgia. …

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