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"Anthropology 101" is the second season premiere of the American television series Community. It was originally broadcast on September 23, 2010 on NBC . In the episode, the study group attends their first series of classes in Anthropology 101, the course they had decided to take together in the new semester.
1996 (Kristin D. Sobolik, Kristen J. Gremillion, Patricia Whitten, and Patty Jo Watson). Technical Note: Sex Determination and Dietary Analysis of Prehistoric Human Paleofeces. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 101:283-290. 1996 Diffusion and Adoption of Crops in Evolutionary Perspective. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 15: 183-204.
In season 2, he is in the same anthropology class as the study group. In the episode "Anthropology 101", after he asks the study group to let him join them, he is then seen in the study room secretly plotting his revenge on them for getting him fired, switching between evil and right sides like the character Gollum from The Lord of the Rings.
Mascia-Lees, Frances E. Review of The Convict and the Colonel in American Anthropologist 101(1999):217-218. Price, Richard. 1995. “Executing Ethnicity: The Killings in Suriname.” Cultural Anthropology 10:437-471. Richard Price, “Invitation to Historians: Practices of Historical Narrative.” Rethinking History 5(2001):357-365. Price ...
Enraged, Annie claims she's tired of lending her stuff and not getting it back, and demands everyone to stay to find the pen, as the television-savvy (occasionally metafictional) Abed notes they are on the precipice of entering a bottle episode within the sitcom that encompasses their lives.
Biology/Anthropology 101: Molecules: Philip Ball: 27 November 2003: Stories of the Invisible: A Guided Tour of Molecules, 2001: Biology/Chemistry 102: Art history: Dana Arnold: 22 January 2004 2 March 2020 (2nd ed.) Art/History 103: Presocratic Philosophy: Catherine Osborne: 22 April 2004: Philosophy/Classical Studies 104: The Elements: Philip ...
Marvin Harris, a historian of anthropology, begins The Rise of Anthropological Theory with the statement that anthropology is "the science of history". [10] He is not suggesting that history be renamed to anthropology, or that there is no distinction between history and prehistory, or that anthropology excludes current social practices, as the general meaning of history, which it has in ...
Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo is a 1966 book by the anthropologist and cultural theorist Mary Douglas.It is her best known work. In 1991 the Times Literary Supplement listed it as one of the hundred most influential non-fiction books published since 1945.