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Globalization: A Navajo (Dine) Case Study

Anthropology

Location
Tuba City, Arizona, Navajo Nation

Description
The Diné (Navajo) were drawn into an increasingly global system of economic, political and cultural relationships beginning with the arrival of the Spanish in the southwest in the 1500s. This course traces the effects of outside influences on the nation and its people and the roles that the Navajo Nation and its people have played in shaping these relationships. The theoretical focus is the many-faceted and much-debated concept of globalization. Students will also be introduced to ethnographic methods and data gathering techniques during the three weeks on location in Navajo Nation territory.

Specific topics include 19th and 20th century Navajo-U.S. relations, the Navajo involvement in the two world wars, as well as more recent wars, transnational energy companies and their impact on Navajo affairs, global cultural influences on Navajo youth, tourism, identity and the concept of dual citizenship, and Navajo local and international political and social activism.

Navajo students and instructors will be an integral part of this course.

Students will begin the work for the course a prior to leaving through online collaboration and assignments. Upon returning from the Navajo Nation students will complete the final assignments for the course.

Navajo Nation
The Navajo Nation reservation or Dineh Bikeyah (Land of The People), spans Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. Tuba City is located in Northern Arizona, nestled within the purples, blues, and reds of painted desert. Natural beauty and endless opportunities for cultural learning abound in this community. Recreational and cultural activities may include presentations from a Navajo Tribal Delegate, a WWII Navajo Code Talker, and a visit to a traditional sheep farm. Canyon hiking and visits to various scenic spots in Arizona, such as the Grand Canyon, may also be possible. Service projects in Tuba City are arranged through the local schools and often include tutoring and mentoring youth.

Details

Instructor: Monica Frolander-Ulf

Course Cost

Credits: 6

Service-Learning in the Navajo Nation: May 27 - June 17, 2004

Credits Awarded: Credits are awarded for this course through the University of Pittsburgh. This course fulfills Special Topics in Cultural Anthropology (ANTH 1737) for 3 credits and Anthropology Independent Study (ANTH 1901) for 3 credits.

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Navajo Nation

 

 

 

 


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