The first interdisciplinary discipline, it synthesizes the disciplines of a liberal arts education and applies them to the real world. Anthropology is not just done in the jungle. As different ethnic groups come together and break apart – from Los Angeles to Bosnia – anthropologists strive to understand cultural difference and social change. Why do people care about their heritages? Why do they fight for the right to practice their religions? How are cultural traditions invented, maintained, and transformed? These are anthropological questions that demand understanding of the cultural landscapes that, as humans, we create and inhabit.
Anthropology is a comprehensive and comparative discipline that embraces human life in all of its diversity and complexity. Broad in focus, Anthropology seeks to understand why people in both exotic and familiar settings do what they do and what accounts for human differences and similarities. It asks how people use material and symbolic resources to solve, often in very different ways, the problems of living in the world and with each other. To arrive at their interpretations, anthropologists interweave the sciences, social sciences, and humanities, engaging in continuous dialogue with other disciplines that enrich the learning experience.
Student Accomplishments
Honors and prizes awarded to our students.
Faculty Accomplishments
Recent publications and projects from our faculty
Student-Initiated Research Grants: Isabelle Moore ’18
Isabelle Moore '18 received a Student-Initiated Research Grant to go to Spain and carry out an anthropological study of what pilgrims carry with them on the Camino del Santiago. Here, she and professor of anthropology James Trostle, talk about the importance of extending the classroom experience to the field.
Amanda J. Guzmán, assistant professor of anthropology and co-director of Trinity’s Center for Caribbean Studies, has been named as a fellow for a new research project hosted by Hunter College’s Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO).
A half a world away from the urban landscape of Hartford, Joshua Jacoves ’23 spent the fall 2022 semester in the mountains, jungles, and farms of Nepal, learning the Tibetan language and studying elephant tourism.
Trinity students enrolled in January Term courses this winter engaged in diverse topics in computer labs, in the outdoors, and even in a galaxy far, far away. J-Term courses appealed to a broad range of interests, and allowed for an intensity of focus not often possible during a busy semester.
GET IN TOUCH
Anthropology
Shafqat Hussain, ChairMcCook Building
300 Summit Street
Hartford, CT 06106