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Anthropology at AU

Transform cultural understanding into social change


AU's Department of Anthropology is one of the nation's leading centers for public anthropology. Our students and faculty combine rigorous research with hands-on community engagement to address today's pressing challenges.

Real-World Impact

  •  Anthropology student Haley Armstrong investigates historical colonialism's modern legacy through field work at Historic St. Mary's City
  • Dr. Zev Cossin's research in the Ecuadorian Andes reveals how colonial agricultural practices shape today's food security and climate challenges
  • Students gain hands-on experience in our specialized labs, from analyzing artifacts to developing policy briefs for local government

Programs of Study

  • Prepare for careers in public service, community organizing, and social advocacy with an MA in Public Anthropology
  • Combine field training with public engagement through funded research opportunities in our PhD program

Students floating soil

News

Events   Research & publications

Professors Thurka Sangaramoorthy, Zoltán Glück, Chuck Sturtevant,Zev Cossin, Mubbashir Rizvi, Daniel Sayers, Orisanmi Burton, and C. Anne Claus

Faculty

Our faculty work at the intersection of law, policy, and ethics, addressing issues such as human effects on the environment and how communities past and present approached sustainability and development, or designing community-focused strategies for combating health inequities.
Our faculty  Research & publications

Spotlight

Justin Sisk
 

Justin SiskMA, Public Anthropology

American University has furthered my academic training as a scholar of anthropology and religion. It allowed me to work closely with religious communities and to showcase those findings in an academic fashion.

"American University has furthered my academic training as a scholar of anthropology and religion,” says Public Anthropology MA candidate Justin Sisk. “It allowed me to work closely with religious communities and to showcase those findings in an academic fashion.”

Justin focuses his master’s research on Norse Paganism — a religion that emphasizes community building through the worship of the Norse pantheon of Gods and Goddesses, ritual, and a close tie to nature.

During his studies at AU, Justin completed an internship with the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, where he explored the economic, cultural, environmental, and social implications that surround ginseng digging in Appalachian communities. The experience gave him an opportunity to hone his skills as an interview transcriber and immerse himself in the rigorous Smithsonian research process.  

Justin plans to pursue a PhD and ultimately teach at a university, research institute, or museum and continue his work on religious beliefs, ritualistic behavior, identity, and counter-cultural narratives. “AU is helping me accomplish this goal by providing me with a wonderful learning environment that will not only help me receive my master's degree, but also help further my knowledge-building as a scholar,” he says.


Jacket cover of Tip of the Spear

Social Sciences ·

‘An Epochal Act of Abolitionist Worldmaking’: New Book Recounts Attica Uprising

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Tim Doud with his Art at Amtrak mural “A Great Public Work”

Research ·

College Faculty Receive 80 Awards Totaling Over $11 Million in 2023

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Prof. Thurka Sangaramoorthy

Research ·

When the Personal Is Political

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