Archaeology News and Announcements

from Brown University's Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

Month: January 2022 (Page 2 of 3)

CFP: CMSMC

Call for Papers
The Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture (CMSMC) is circulating a call for papers relating to the study of material culture. The mission of CMSMC is to provide a platform for master’s scholars, who are often at a crucial point in their academic careers, to publish their work and contribute to the expanding field of material culture. CMSMC defines master’s scholars as those earning or possessing a master’s degree. Those who have just started their PhD program and are still in their coursework portion of the program are eligible for publication as well. PhD candidates and higher are not eligible.

CMSMC seeks to foster interdisciplinary discussions and address a diverse pool of topics. The Coalition desires to amplify emerging voices who can bring fresh and diverse perspectives to the field. Furthermore, CMSMC is dedicated to disseminating information that is publicly accessible while maintaining rigorous academic standards. Papers will be accepted on a rolling basis.

Submission Guidelines
In order to submit a paper to CMSMC, you will need to provide an abstract (up to 350 words), a full draft with citations and bibliography, and CV. Please email these materials to admin@cmsmc.org with a subject line that reads as follows “last name_submission.” All submissions must be cited in the Chicago Manual of Style. Submissions will be reviewed and you will be contacted once a decision is made. If your submission is accepted, you will be given a publication date and connected with your editor. Please note, in order to be considered for publication by CMSMC, your paper must be an original work and should not have been previously published or under consideration for publication elsewhere.

Article Lengths and Criteria

1.) Short Article (roughly 1500-2000 words):

This piece will typically focus on either a single object, like an object biography,
or will be a short review of a book/article/essay/exhibition etc. These pieces
should feature no more than three images.

2.) Medium Article (2,000-3,500 words):

These pieces will be similar to conference papers in both length and style. They
should feature no more than 6 images. Examples include a theoretical discussion
surrounding objects through an interdisciplinary lens, an examination of several
objects, or a body of work that centers around a common theme.

3.) Long-Form Article (3,500-5,000 words):

These pieces will be in-depth investigations on a variety of topics. While we
encourage these pieces to be collaborative, these are the most flexible and author driven of our three article lengths. These pieces may feature no more than 10 images; if more are necessary, the images and the images rights and citations must
be included in the proposal.

4.) Serialized Article (5,000+ words or content requires multiple installations):

For works longer than 5,000 words, there is an option to serialize an article by publishing two or more separate pieces. These works should be similar to long-form articles in style and content and serialization will be considered after acceptance. These pieces may feature no more than 10 images; if more are necessary, the images and the images rights and citations must be included in the proposal.

Please note that all image rights are the responsibility of the author.
CMSMC looks forward to receiving proposals in response to the call, and is happy to respond to inquiries from interested parties. Questions may be sent to admin@cmsmc.org with the subject line “Submission_Question.”

CMSMC FREE professional development events

From the Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture (CMSMC):

CMSMC has transitioned to FREE professional development events for the foreseeable future. These events are all virtual and are perfect for both students and graduates. See below for the upcoming events of interest. 

Interviewing 101
February 17th, 2022
FREE
Sign Up!

The Realities of The Museum Job Market
May 17th, 2022
FREE
Sign Up!

Material Culture Career Paths
June 15th, 2022
FREE
Sign Up!

ARIT Lecture: “”The Classical Shipwreck at Tektaș Burnu, Turkey”

From the American Research Institute in Turkey:

An online lecture with Dr. Deborah Carlson, Institute of Nautical Archaeology, on the excavation and study of a small Greek merchant ship that sank off the Aegean cost of Turkey around 425 B.C. 
This event is a collaboration with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) and the Koç University Mustafa V. Koç Maritime Archaeology Research Center (KUDAR)

Wednesday January 26, 2022, 11 am EST

Join the lecture here.  

New Podcast: Our Past is the Future LIVE

From the Society of Black Archaeologists:

After much anticipation, we are proud to announce the release OUR PAST IS THE FUTURE!

In partnership with Sapiens, the Indigenous Archaeology Collective and RadioCIAMS, we are launching a new podcast, asking what makes you … you? And who tells which stories and why?

SAPIENS hosts Ora Marek-Martinez and SBA Secretary, Yoli Ngandali, explore stories of Black and Indigenous scholars as they transform the field of archeology and the stories that make us … us.

Available wherever you get your podcast. Listen now!

Donate.

CFP: The Dalhousie University’s Graduate History Society

From the Dalhousie University’s Graduate History Society:

We are writing on behalf of Dalhousie University’s Graduate History Society to ask if you could circulate this email and the attached files to your graduate students.

The Dalhousie Graduate History Society invites graduate students from all disciplines within the Humanities and Social Sciences to submit abstracts to Dalhousie University’s 23rd Annual History Across the Disciplines conference.

The conference is entitled “Encountering Colonialism: Land, Lives, and Legacies,” and will be held virtually, on March 18th-19th, 2022. The conference is intended to embrace all scholarship that explores the dynamics of interaction between and within colonial and Indigenous powers and peoples.

Applicants should submit a 300-word abstract and a short personal biography to the conference committee no later than Friday, February 11th, 2022.

For more information, please feel free to get in touch with us at dalconference2022@gmail.com. We look forward to reviewing your abstracts!

All the best,

Jeremy Spronk, Evan Jennex, Catherine Charlton

Conference Organizers, Department of History, Dalhousie University

Dalhousie University is located in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq. We are all treaty people.

The Choices Program is on YouTube

From the Choices Program:

Did you know that the Choices Program has a YouTube channel? In addition to hundreds of individual videos with leading scholars and practitioners, the Choices channel also has dozens of topical and thematic video playlists.

Choices YouTube playlists are a versatile resource for teachers that can be used in a variety of ways: 

  • Substitute a Choices video playlist for a short reading assignment;
  • Pair a playlist with in-class worksheets for days you have a substitute;
  • Use playlists as professional development in order to refresh your knowledge of a particular subject or gain tips on ways to teach with certain types of sources.

Check out the specific ideas below and then explore the Choices’ YouTube Channel for dozens of additional playlists to use in and out of the classroom!

Explore Choices on YouTube

Choices is hiring!

Join our team! The Choices Program is hiring a Digital Sales Manager. The successful candidate will be a key team member who will be responsible for a variety of public facing and internal administrative tasks related to the sales of the Choices Program’s digital curriculum. The new staff member will also support efforts and initiatives in professional development, marketing, and outreach as they relate to digital curriculum sales. 

Apply here.

Workshops and Webinars
Don’t miss out on our upcoming professional development events, both online and in-person. Explore our materials on westward expansion, the U.S. role in the world, current issues, U.S. history, Brazil, genocide, and more! Sign up today and then see for yourself how easily Choices Program materials can be integrated into your classroom.
Explore professional development.

Martha Sharp Joukowsky (1936-2022)

Monday January 10, 2022

Providence, Rhode Island

We share the sad news that Martha Sharp Joukowsky passed away on January 7, 2022. A generous gift from Martha and her husband Artemis Joukowsky – whom she survived by slightly over a year — made possible the creation of Brown University’s Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, named in their honor in 2004. Martha’s influence on the Joukowsky Institute goes far beyond sharing a name, or even enabling the Institute’s creation. She was seemingly fearless and tireless, commanding huge excavation teams of students and workers well into her seventies. She cared for her students with a fierce and extraordinary kindness – while also strictly enforcing the very highest academic standards. Martha made everything more fun, and more special. She sparkled, and her glow lit everyone around her. Her approach to scholarship, teaching, and mentoring is woven into the Institute’s essence, and continues to guide our mission and our work.

Born in Montague, MA in 1936, Martha grew up in a Unitarian family with a keen sense of social justice that led her parents to become heavily involved in humanitarian relief efforts in World War II Europe. Martha was educated at Brown’s Pembroke College, where she met and married Artemis in 1956; she received her BA in 1958. The young family moved to Italy in 1960 and subsequently lived in Lebanon (1961-72) and Hong Kong before returning to the US in 1974. During their years in Beirut, Martha and Artemis not only traveled extensively through the Levant, including Cyprus, but Martha also engaged intensively with the deep past of the Middle East, earning her MA in Archaeology from the American University of Beirut in the process (1972). She received her PhD from the Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne University in 1982 with a dissertation on the prehistory of western Anatolia (published as Prehistoric Aphrodisias, 1996).

Having previously taught at NYU, Hunter College and at Brown’s then Center for Old World Archaeology and Art, 1982 was also the year that Martha was appointed to the faculty at Brown as Professor of Old World Archaeology and Art and of Anthropology. Brown subsequently awarded her an honorary doctorate in 1985. She held her post at Brown until her retirement in 2002. During these years, she conducted fieldwork in Turkey, Italy, and Greece and, especially, Jordan, where she discovered and excavated the Great Temple at Petra (Petra Great Temple, 3 vols 1998; 2007; 2016). On the Petra project Martha trained generations of Brown students, undergraduate as well as graduate, in field archaeology. Other major publications include A Complete Manual of Field Archaeology (1980) and Early Turkey (1996). Between 1989 and 1993, Martha served as the President of the American Institute of Archaeology. She was also honored by national and international institutions with multiple medals and awards.

Over the fifteen years of the Institute’s existence, both Martha and Arte remained close friends and dedicated supporters. As Martha worked on the third and final volume on her excavations in Petra, which appeared in 2016, she would regularly visit Rhode Island Hall and hear from faculty and students about their fieldwork and classes. Most of all, she happily presided over all the graduation ceremonies at the Institute since 2006 to hand the diplomas personally to the students — until her health no longer allowed her to do so – and her presence (and beautiful Sorbonne regalia) filled our Commencements with the gravitas, style, and irrepressible humor that she brought to everything she touched.

Martha Sharp Joukowsky was a leading field archaeologist, who dedicated her life to exploring the Middle East; a champion of archaeological methodology and the accessible publication of data; and a mentor generous with her time and material; she was also a role model for female students and scholars in Archaeology far beyond those she herself taught. We will sorely miss Martha’s friendship and encouragement, while we gratefully remember the legacy that she and Arte established for the discipline and on Brown’s campus.

Field School Opportunity for Students 2022

From the Blackfriary Archaeology Field School:

Dear Sir/ Madam,

I am the Director/Principal Investigator of a community-based research and teaching excavation in Ireland. We have been providing archaeological training and internships to university students (see www.bafs.ie) since 2010. I know that at a time of ongoing uncertainty it is difficult for staff and students to plan ahead for study abroad experiences. I’d like to assure you that our field school activities are fully compliant with health and safety in light of Covid 19 and it helps greatly that our activities are predominantly outdoors. We did run a successful and totally safe season this past summer (2021), and intend to do so again in 2022.

The Blackfriary Archaeology Field School is part of the award-winning Blackfriary Community Heritage and Archaeology Project (BCHAP) in the town of Trim, County Meath, Ireland. Focusing on the buried remains of the 13th century AD/CE Dominican friary and associated graveyard, the field school is suitable for students from a wide range of backgrounds including archaeology, history, anthropology, and forensics – and for students looking for a unique study abroad experience. As participants in a public archaeology project, students are actively engaged with our outreach activities on site. They are also housed with families in Trim, allowing them to integrate with the local community.

We are offering three courses in summer 2022 (BAFS Summer courses), as well as internship opportunities (BAFS Internships). There is a two-week introductory course running from 3 May to 5 August. This can be combined with an advanced two-week course, given in two 2 sessions from 3 – 26 May and 6 June to 1 – July, which provide training in excavation and post-excavation methods. A five-week course, from 4 July to 5 August 2022, includes a significant bioarchaeology component taught by Dr. Rachel Scott of DePaul University, Chicago, as well as general excavation techniques. For students with previous field and/or lab experience, we offer internships for a minimum of six weeks in the areas of excavation, post-excavation, and community outreach. Our brochure (BAFS Flyer) can be accessed from this email, and here are links to our social media pages (press ctrl and click to access). Students can send queries or apply to a course directly through the website.

Facebook

Instagram

LinkedIn

YouTube

In addition to our open enrolment courses above, we also host faculty-led courses for a range of academic partners and have significant experience in providing services to students and faculty, ensuring an excellent educational and culturally rich study abroad experience. If you have any questions or are interested in knowing more about the preparation of a customised programme, please do not hesitate to contact me directly.

Many thanks for your help. The project has had fantastic support and we hope to continue to grow.

Yours sincerely,

Finola

Fatimah Tobing Rony, “Resisting Visual Biopolitics: Theory and Practice”

From the Brown Arts Institute and the Department of Modern Culture and Media:

Please join the Brown Arts Institute and the Department of Modern Culture and Media:

A lecture by Fatimah Tobing Rony, Professor and Chair, Film and Media Studies, Professor Visual Studies, University of California, Irvine
“Resisting Visual Biopolitics: Theory and Practice”
January 20, 2022 @ 3:30 PM Via Zoom https://brown.zoom.us/j/96460086625

Through the story of Annah la Javanaise, a trafficked 13-year-old girl who was found wandering the streets of Paris in 1893 and who became the maid and model of painter Paul Gauguin, Fatimah Tobing Rony introduces theories of visual biopolitics to examine those who are allowed to live and those who are allowed to die, in representations of Indonesian women.  In her talk she will be screening her short animated film, Annah la Javanaise . 

Sponsored by the Office of the Provost and Dean of the Faculty

Organized by the Office of the Provost and Dean of the Faculty, Brown Arts Institute and Department of Modern Culture and Media

ArchaeoCon 2022

From Archaeological Institute of America:

ArchaeoCon 2022 is Saturday, March 5! Join us for a virtual celebration of archaeology with live presentations and activities. Adventurer Josh Gates, Egyptologist Kara Cooney, and underwater archaeologist James Delgado will return with exciting content. Archaeologists Ilaria Patania and Debby Sneed will both make their ArchaeoCon debuts. Register by February 13 to secure your early bird ticket and save!

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