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Anthropology at Columbia is the oldest department of anthropology in the United States. Founded by Franz Boas in 1896 as a site of academic inquiry inspired by the uniqueness of cultures and their histories, the department has fostered an expansiveness of thought and independence of intellectual pursuit. Cross-cultural interpretation, global socio-political considerations, a markedly interdisciplinary approach, and a willingness to think otherwise have, from the outset, informed the spirit of Anthropology at Columbia. Boas himself wrote widely, on pre-modern cultures and modern assumptions, on language, race, art, dance, religion, politics, and much else, as did his graduate students, including, most notably, Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead. In these current times of increasing global awareness, this same spirit of mindful interconnectedness guides the department. Professors in Anthropology at Columbia today write widely--on colonialism and postcolonialism; on matters of gender, theories of history, knowledge, and power; on language, law, magic, mass-mediated cultures, modernity, and flows of capital and desire; on nationalism, ethnic imaginations, and political contestations; on material cultures and environmental conditions; on ritual, performance, and the arts; on linguistics, symbolism, and questions of representation. They write as well across worlds of similarities and differences--concerning the Middle East, China, Africa, the Caribbean, Japan, Latin America, South Asia, Europe, Southeast Asia, North America, and other increasingly transnational and technologically virtual conditions of being. The Department of Anthropology has, traditionally, offered courses and majors in three main areas: sociocultural anthropology, archaeology, and biological/physical anthropology. While sociocultural anthropology now comprises the largest part of the department and accounts for the majority of faculty and course offerings, archaeology is also a vibrant program within Anthropology whose interests overlap significantly with those of sociocultural anthropology. Biological/physical anthropology has shifted its program for majors and concentrators to the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology. Students interested in biological/physical anthropology courses offered in the Department of Anthropology thus should look to E3B for their major or concentration.