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Why major in Anthropology?

By Department of Sociology and Anthropology on September 5, 2014

In contrast to other majors, students often come into Colgate with very little experience of anthropology (or sociology – but that’s the next article). So why study anthropology?

Think about some of the hot trends in business, politics, and education today:
• Internationalization and globalization
• Diversity, cross-cultural communication, and understanding
• Multi-disciplinary research and knowledge
All of these things are at the heart of anthropology, and they are what anthropologists have been doing for over a century.

Anthropology initially focused on studying foreign cultures, but for decades anthropologists have been using those techniques to study their own societies as well.

Anthropology is inherently interdisciplinary, designed to look deeply into societies across time and space. For example, archaeology focuses on material culture, making sense of the past, but also drawing connections to issues in contemporary societies. In general, anthropology examines how people think about family structures, economic systems, health and well-being, legal frameworks, food systems, body image, and media influences–to name just a few areas of inquiry.

As a result, anthropology provides students with the skills to meet the demands of an increasingly transborder world.

To learn more, see
This is Anthropology
“Anthropology: the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities.” American Anthropological Association

Submitted by Professors Carolyn Hsu & Michelle Bigenho


Why major in sociology?

By Department of Sociology and Anthropology on September 4, 2014

Before I went to college, I had never taken a class in sociology. This is pretty common for Colgate students as well. So why major in sociology? There are a lot of reasons, but here are a few:

  • Sociologists study social problems in order to understand them, and to make the world a better place. Some of our big topics are inequality, crime, poverty, immigration, and environmental change.
  • Sociologists study social change and how it is affecting people. The discipline that gives you the skills to study the rise of social media, for example, or the social effects of our changing economy.
  • Speaking of skills, sociology teaches students to be adept in both quantitative (statistical) and qualitative data analysis.

To learn more, see Why a Sociology Major?:

“[Sociology] provides students with the intellectual tools needed to make sense of the shifting and conflictual social world we live in, and this in turn permits them to contribute to solutions for the most difficult social problems that we face.”

—Daniel Little, Huffington Post

Carolyn Hsu
Associate Professor of Sociology