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Guatemala anthropology

Guatemala
6 undergraduate credits in anthropology
Richmond: May 26; Guatemala: May 27–July 8
Dr. Maury Hutcheson
$2,500 (includes roundtrip airfare) plus VCU tuition

Registration deadline: March 16, 2009

Status: Program full

The Office of International Education and the School of World Studies are pleased to offer a unique opportunity for students to study the Highland Maya Culture. The program is based in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala and will allow students to observe the cultural complexity of the Guatemalan highlands. The location provides an ideal setting in which to explore different topics such as cultural pluralism, religious conservation and change, local responses to globalization, and cultural revitalization movements. This program is well suited for students in anthropology, international studies and religious studies.

Course and credit options: Students are required to register for a total of six credits, including three credits in the core offering, ANTH 391: Highland Maya and Ladino Culture Past and Present. Anthropology majors in particular are encouraged to register for ANTH 315: Anthropological Field Methods and Research Design (3 credits). With permission of the instructor, students may register for three credits of independent study under ANTH 492, INTL 492 or RELS 492, as an alternative to ANTH 315. Students pursuing independent studies are expected to participate fully in all group activities while in Guatemala, though their final research paper may be different.

 
Course description

Based in Quetzaltenango, this six week program will proved students with a comprehensive overview of Mayan indigenous life in Guatemala, past and present, including opportunities for individual and group research through participant observation, attendance at cultural events, lectures on selected topics, and excursions to museums and major archaeological sites, including Copan, Honduras. Interethnic relations between the Maya and their non-indigenous Ladino neighbors will be a special focus of this year’s program. Course instruction will be in English, but in order to facilitate our rapid immersion in the local culture, students will also receive two weeks of individualized, one-on-one tutoring in Spanish at the Escuela de Español Juan Sisay. Readings in history, ethnography and archaeology directly related to the communities students visit will be closely integrated with discussions of anthropological theory and effective research practices. Regularly scheduled classroom meetings will alternate with weekend field trips to local indigenous communities throughout the region, including Lake Atitlán and Chichicastenango, as well as presentations by local Maya cultural leaders and visits to sites of cultural interest in the town and its surrounding villages. Students will gain practical experience in a variety of ethnographic research techniques as well as the ethical dimension of anthropological fieldwork while exploring historical continuities and transformations in Mayan culture and religious practice, especially in response to international tourism and economic globalization.

The program will be led by Dr. Maury Hutcheson of the VCU School of World Studies. His ethnographic research centers on the religious practices and expressive culture of the K’iche’ Maya, and their creative response to nearly 500 years of Spanish missionization and cultural domination, as well as the impact of globalization and tourism in the present generation. Hutcheson has extensive experience in Guatemala, having made more than eight research visits, totaling roughly two years.

» View 2009 itinerary [PDF]

Registration deadline: March 16, 2009

Applications will be accepted until the deadline or until participant space is full.

Program cost

$2,500 plus applicable VCU tuition

The program fee is $2,500 and includes the following:

  • Roundtrip airfare
  • Accommodations
  • All meals while living with Guatemalan families
  • Study visits and excursions
  • Ground transportation
  • On-site program director support
  • Application fee and deposit
  • Pre-departure orientation
  • VCU administrative fees
  • International Student Identification Card

The following are not included in the program fee. Students are responsible for:

  • VCU tuition and fees
  • All meals when we are based in hotels
  • Passport application fee
  • Personal expenses during the program (estimated at $500)
  • Anything not specifically mentioned above

Please budget for these additional expenses.

Airfare

Airfare is included. The professor will make travel arrangements between the U.S. and Guatemala, departing on the morning of Wednesday, May 27 and returning July 8.

Eligibility

Students must have a 2.0 GPA in order to participate. All applicants must have completed ANTH 103 Introduction to Anthropology. All applicants must agree to an interview with the instructor and with an Education Abroad office representative prior to acceptance into the course. A student’s GPA may be taken into account but will not be the sole determining factor. This program is primarily intended to benefit majors in the anthropology program by providing a practicum in ethnographic research methods and research design, along with a survey of Highland Maya culture. As such, anthropology majors will enjoy preference over non-anthropology majors. Within that cohort, advanced anthropology majors will have preference over less advanced students, as measured in the number of anthropology credits already completed. Non-anthropology majors from the School of World Studies who wish to fulfill their requirements for international experience will be next in line, and preference again will be extended to senior students over less advanced students. Spanish proficiency is not formally required, but in the event that many students fitting the criteria above, preference would be shown to those with greater levels of Spanish fluency.

While in Guatemala

Principal points of interest will likely include the communities of Antigua, Zunil, Lake Atitlán, Chichicastenango, Tecpán and Momostenango and the archaeological sites of Copan, Utatlán, Iximché and Abaj Takalik, though the list may be subject to change. Students will also have an opportunity to climb the active volcano Pacaya.

Students will be living in home-stays with Mayan and Ladino families in Quetzaltenango for most of the five weeks, which will include private rooms, shared baths, three meals each day, purified drinking water and opportunities for direct engagement with the domestic life of the host families. Quetzaltenango is a large yet comfortably scaled city with a majority indigenous population, a regional hub permitting access to many small indigenous communities and sites of interest.

The program will also include several one to four night excursions to other locations of particular interest, about a dozen nights in all. During these excursions students will stay in hotels and should expect to purchase meals in restaurants or from vendors in the open air markets.

Important facts
  • Tuition
  • Financial aid
  • Passports
  • Payment of fees
  • Refund policy

Tuition is charged separately and additionally at standard VCU rates for in-state students and at a 40 percent discount for out-of-state students. Estimated costs, based on current tuition per credit, are as follows: undergraduate in-state, $208.55 (per 3 credit class: $619.05); undergraduate out-of-state, $421.20 (per 3 credit class: $1,257); graduate in-state, $428.68 (per 3 credit class: $1,279.44); graduate out-of-state, $543.90 ($1,625.10 per 3 credit class).

Eligible VCU students may apply for need-based financial aid to participate in this program. Contact VCU Financial Aid, Ginter House, Room 110B at (804) 828-6669 or e-mail faidmail@vcu.edu. VCU offers its students a limited number of scholarships for study abroad participation. Contact VCU Education Abroad or see our Web site for further details.

If you have a passport, make sure it is valid for at least six months after your return date. If you do not have a passport, apply early because the processing time can take up to eight weeks. For more information on how to apply for a passport, visit http://travel.state.gov.

The non-refundable registration fee of $250 is due upon registration. The balance of the program fee and the tuition costs (based on the number of credits taken) will be billed separately through VCU Student Accounting after May 2009 (both amounts may be billed at the same time).

All withdrawals must be made in writing and submitted to the Director of Education Abroad.

The refund schedule is as follows:

  • Prior to Jan. 8: I am eligible for a refund of the portionof the program fee that has not already been expended in payment of costs outlined on the individual program sheet in support of my participation. I understand that, as the spring progresses, the charges may reflect an increasing amount, depending on what payments have been made on my behalf. After Jan. 8, I understand that the entire program fee may be due. I understand that the refund amount cannot be determined until I formally submit written withdrawal from the program.
  • After Jan. 8: I will be responsible to pay the entire program fee. In the event of an unexpected emergency that occurs after Jan. 8, I understand that I must provide a physician’s certification that my condition prohibits participation. In this case, refunds will be limited to recoverable expenses.

Every effort is made to provide updated and accurate information at the time of publication. The sponsors reserve the right to make necessary changes to the programs and costs. The university reserves the right to revise or alter all fees, regulations pertaining to student fees, and fee collection procedures at any time.