Dylan Clark,  Courses Taught

 

Dylan Clark

Lecturer in Anthropology

University of Toronto


UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO:


FALL 2010:   ANT322 (on cultural theory, cultural studies, subcultures, youth, commodification, cultures of capitalism)   


FALL 2010:   ANT204 (introductory course in socio-cultural anthropology, in which we survey the field and explore questions about culture, language, identity, and power). 


SPRING 2011: ANT204 (2nd half)


SPRING 2011: ANT206 (2nd half of Culture & Communication; first semester taught by Dr. Francis Cody)


SPRING 2011: ANT458 Anthropology of Crime, Law, and Order


SPRING 2011: ANT208  The Cool Culture Soul Machine: The Anthropology of Everyday Life.


ANT204  Sociocultural Anthropology, (Fall 2009-Spring 2010)

ANT322  Anthropology of Youth.  (Spring 2010)

ANT335  Anthropology of Gender (Spring 2010)

ANT458  Anthropology of Crime, Law, and Order (Spring 2008)

ANT322  Anthropology of Youth  (Spring 2008) 

ANT204  Sociocultural Anthropology  (2006-7, full year course)

ANT102  Introduction to Sociocultural and Linguistic Anthropology (Fall 2006)


UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO

PACS 4500 Seminar in Peace and Conflict Studies  (Spring 2004, University of Colorado, Boulder)

GEOG 4742  Environment and Peoples (Spring 2002, Fall 2003, Spring 2004), University of Colorado, Boulder.

GEOG 1992  Introduction to Human Geographies (Spring 2002--2 sections, Summer 2001, Spring 2001, Summer 1999). University of Colorado, Boulder

Minority Arts and Sciences Program, Geography of "Civilizations", University of Colorado, Boulder . Summer 2000.


UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

Teaching Assistant      Department of Ethnic Studies, University of Washington, Seattle. Courses: “Introduction to African American Studies,” 1996-1998 (2 times); “Introduction to Asian-American Studies,” winter 1998.

Teaching Assistant.     Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle. Course: “Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology,” 1993-1995 (3 times).

Reader. Department of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle. Course: Geography of Third World Development, summer, 1997.

updated June 8, 2011