Metadata
Title
For Prospectives
Category
undergraduate
UUID
dd3b9f1320434a3f8fb8bb42b079bcd0
Source URL
https://anthropology.fas.harvard.edu/prospectives
Parent URL
https://anthropology.fas.harvard.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T03:27:41+00:00
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For Prospectives

Source: https://anthropology.fas.harvard.edu/prospectives Parent: https://anthropology.fas.harvard.edu/

"Studying social theory exposed me to how people try to understand what is happening in the world. Ethnography and participant observation gave us a method by which to dig deeply into the worlds of people from all corners of the earth."

Jim Yong Kim\ President, World Bank\ GSAS PhD in Anthropology, ’93

Areas of Study

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What is Anthropology? expand_more

Anthropology is the study of human diversity in the distant past and the present and teaches us to recognize the remarkable array of circumstances in which human beings live their lives and make meaning from them.

But anthropology is more than just a catalog of diversity. There is an oft-cited phrase that anthropology “makes the familiar strange and the strange familiar.” What does this mean? At the very least, it means stepping back and seeing ourselves the way others might see us – a shift in perspective that is foundational to human empathy and humility.

Anthropology also invites deeper analysis of behaviors that we might think we fully understand but that have histories and complexities that only reveal themselves to careful investigation. We seek to understand the full context of people's actions and all that they impact. This is why we do long term field research in local languages, and excavate artifacts in their complicated contexts -- to understand social life in all its richness and depth.

And finally, making the familiar strange demands an ethical and political accounting. It means not accepting the world as given. This might well be the heart of the discipline, its moral optimism: the conviction that things can be different and better -- and that knowledge about the world should be oriented towards greater empathy, solidarity, and equality.

Why concentrate in Anthropology? expand_more

The study of anthropology prepares students to address global concerns through a contextualized study of society, culture and civilization, and can lead to careers in global health and medicine, law, government, museums, education, the arts, cultural and environmental management, business and entrepreneurship, among other fields, not to mention academia.

Why concentrate in Anthropology?

How to concentrate in Anthropology? expand_more

Anthropology choose to focus their studies in one of four concentration tracks: Archaeology, Social Anthropology, Combined Archaeology/Social Anthropology, or Anthropology and Medicine. All four options offer flexible plans of study, small group tutorials, individual advising, and opportunities to engage with research in the classroom and through independent projects and senior honors theses.

Archaeology focuses on how the material remains of human activities can be used to understand the various lifeways, structures, and conditions of past human existence, and how people today employ such past materials to create or validate cultural identities.

Social Anthropology focuses on the present and recent past to examine how language, culture, and society shape the actions and behaviors of people from around the world.

Medical Anthropology, a concentration track within the Social Anthropology program, focuses on social medicine coursework and can be suitable for students pursuing pre-medical studies.

The best way to learn more about these fields and begin your journey in the concentration is by taking a gateway course: