Wednesdays, 5:00-8:00PM
Spring 2022, Meets at Harvard Peabody Museum.
We are monitoring the status of each campus, and at this point, it is our understanding that courses will operate in-person again. If that changes, we will update our plans.
Convened at Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnology, this course examines how historical relations of gender, sex, sexuality, and imperial/racialized power continue to be narrativized, hidden, and excavated in historical and contemporary anthropological projects. Using an interdisciplinary feminist lens, we will enter the urgent and complex web of conversations, within the Peabody and between the museum and its publics, about how to reckon with its past and how to move, with ethical alertness and rigor, into the future. Our shared questions include: What does it mean to collect human cultural and biological history? What are the roles of gender, sex, and race in shaping the politics of anthropological collection and study? How are human differences measured, and what do these systems of measurement say about the process of scientific knowledge production? Whose voices hold authority in adjudicating museum collections, and what forms of knowledge and authenticity govern their disposition and interpretation?
Faculty
Caroline Light is Director of Undergraduate Studies and Senior Lecturer on Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Harvard University. Her scholarship focuses on the racialization and heteronormativity of lethal self-defense in the United States. Her practice engages her in racial and gender justice work at the University and beyond.
Meredith Reiches is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Boston. She studies the way race and sex are mutually constitutive in the construction of evolutionary narratives of human origins. The sleight-of-hand in these accounts, she argues, naturalizes historical and contemporary social hierarchies.