
Graduate Program Guide
The graduate program of Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Irvine focuses on social and cultural anthropology. Graduate training in anthropology involves a period of long-term, independent fieldwork, generally (though not always) outside the United States, and often conducted in a language other than English. Graduate students generally obtain grants or other external funding to conduct their fieldwork. Attentive to our discipline's past and indeed the paradigm of disciplinarity that has structured social inquiry since the early 20th century, our program gives students a breadth of knowledge in traditional anthropology and the traditional subjects of anthropological study. At the same time, we push the boundaries of the discipline and use our ethnographic work to stretch the anthropological imagination.
The Department provides students with superb training in both theory and method. Areas of teaching emphasis include: the anthropology of modernity and development; political, legal, and economic anthropology; ethnographic method; and the anthropology of science, technology, and medicine. In addition, PhD students have the option of enrolling in a number of graduate emphases that involve interdisciplinary work in a number of Schools and programs across the campus, including Feminist Studies, Critical Theory, Visual Studies, Translation Studies, and others. The Department is committed to fostering new and innovative approaches to anthropological inquiry in a pluralistic and intellectually open academic environment. The faculty take diverse theoretical and methodological approaches to a variety of substantive issues. They are united, however, in a willingness to question taken-for-granted theoretical premises and analytic frames, and to engage in intellectual dialogue about alternative models and approaches.
The Department's graduate students have an unparalleled record of research funding, receiving prestigious grants and fellowships at higher rates than the national average. Since 1995 they have garnered over $1 million to support their dissertation research. They publish their work in top-ranked journals, and the Department has an excellent track record of placement. Please refer to the section on PhD recipients to learn more about the employment opportunities secured by PhD recipients from the Department of Anthropology.
Program Requirements by Year The program involves three years of course work. The bulk of the curricular requirements are ordinarily satisfied after the first two years, and in the normative cases, the third year involves development of a research proposal, advancement to candidacy, and the securing of funding for fieldwork, in addition to further course work. The fourth (and in many cases, some or all of the fifth) year is devoted to extended anthropological fieldwork. The sixth year (in some cases also part of the fifth) is devoted to writing the dissertation, in close consultation with the advisor and members of the dissertation committee. |
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A Year by Year Overview (in more detail) First Year: In your first year you should take the three required proseminars in sequence. Students often take statistics as well. You might also take the field methods or research design course and some electives. You will have been assigned a first-year advisor. You should meet with that advisor and seek to familiarize yourself with department faculty. By the end of your first year you should be prepared to choose an advisor with whom you wish to continue your work. Your research interests should be getting more focused. You may begin working on a field language. Program Requirements by Year
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