Indigenous Studies (INDS)
The Indigenous Studies minor invites discovery of alternative world views, ecological relationships, societies, religions, arts, and governments of indigenous peoples in North America and beyond from antiquity to the present. Immersed in this inherently interdisciplinary field of study, students have the opportunity to master and employ its many theories and methodologies, debates and issues, in often comparative contexts. Such exposure and training prepares those who achieve the minor for graduate work in the humanities, business, law, and the sciences as they pertain to indigenous peoples, but also for any career that requires a supple knowledge of cultural difference between Arkansas and
Courses
- ANTH 32103 — Indigenous Peoples of North America: Anthropological Perspectives
- ANTH 34703 — North American Prehistory
- ANTH 35303 — Medical Anthropology
- ANTH 41403 — Ecological Anthropology
- CHRK 10103 — Elementary Cherokee I
- CHRK 10203 — Elementary Cherokee II
- COMM 39803 — Special Topics
- ENGL 35503 — Topics in Native American Literature and Culture
- ENGL 45503 — Studies in Native American Literature and Culture
- HIST 41543 — Native American History to 1864
- HIST 41553 — Native American History Since 1864
- WLLC 30503 — The Colonial French in the Mississippi Valley
- WLLC 40103 — Ethno-Historic Approach to Native American Languages