Archaeology News and Announcements

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

Month: December 2024

World Archaeology from Cambridge – Open Access Articles!

Explore brand new collections of free-access book chapters and journal articles on World Archaeology from Cambridge.

Cambridge’s contributing books and journals include: The Archaeology of Han China, The Origins of Agriculture in the Bronze Age Indus Civilization, The Peopling of the Caucus, Antiquity, Advances in Archaeological Practice, the European Journal of Archaeology, American Antiquity, the Journal of Roman Archaeology, Ancient Mesoamerica – and many more! Where not already open access, content is free to read until 31 December 2024.

Click the links to the following content:

University of Michigan’ Museum of Anthropological Archaeology Newsletter!

The U-M Museum of Anthropological Archaeology’s newest issue of their newsletter is now live! Read it here as a pdf.

Call for Proposals : The Greater Boston Digital Research and Pedagogy Symposium

The Greater Boston Digital Research and Pedagogy Symposium is a regional, one-day gathering of students, scholars, librarians, and other practitioners from the New England area working at the intersection of technology and the humanities. Hosted at a different institution each year, the Symposium provides an opportunity for promoting cross-institutional collaboration and showcases the diverse perspectives of our field.

The 2025 symposium will be held on Friday, April 11 at the Central Library of the Boston Public Library, with select sessions streamed online.

The Program Committee welcomes submissions covering a wide variety of topics related to the application of technology, computation, machine learning, and artificial intelligence to humanities research, pedagogy, and professional practice. Proposals on work at any stage in the research process may be submitted.

Given this year’s location at the Boston Public Library, the program committee is especially eager to receive submissions that highlight digital humanities scholarship and projects that intend to reach or engage with a public audience, or submissions that include discussion of the opportunities and challenges associated with developing a public-focused and/or community-engaged practice.

Other themes of particular interest for this year’s symposium include:

  • Sustainability, environmental impact, and reducing digital waste
  • Digital humanities professional practice, departmental development, and labor
  • Preservation of digital objects and scholarship
  • AI and humanistic research; implications of large datasets for human and computational use
  • Digitization practice and digital collection development in service of digital humanities
  • Queering and/or decolonializing digital humanities research and practice
  • Digital humanities and the intersection of identity, social justice, and technology
  • Digital research and pedagogy highlighting questions of diaspora and indigeneity

Proposals may be submitted for the following presentation types:

  • Individual talk (15 min) – 250 word max proposal
  • Panel or round table presentation (90 min) – 500 word max proposal
  • Poster session – 250 word max proposal
  • Workshop (90 min) – 500 word max proposal

For all submissions, please include the name(s) and affiliation(s) as well as a short biography (100 words max) for each participant. Links to presenter CVs or websites are also encouraged. Please indicate if you will need any accommodations that will allow you to participate. Submit a proposal here.

Submission deadline: Monday, February 3, 2025
Symposium: Friday, April 11, 2025; Central Library of the Boston Public Library, Boston, MA

Fondazione Lemmermann 2025 Fellowship Award for Research in Rome

The Lemmermann Foundation awards a limited number of fellowships to master’s students and doctoral candidates in order to support their cost of research in the classical studies and humanities. Fields of study include but are not limited to Archaeology, History, History of Art, Italian, Latin, Musicology, Philosophy, and Philology. Applicants must provide evidence for their need to study and carry out research in Rome. Topic of research must be related to Rome or the Roman culture from the Pre-Roman period to the present day.

ELIGIBILITY:
Applicants must:

  1. be enrolled in a recognized higher education program or affiliated with a research institute;
  2. have a basic knowledge of the Italian language;
  3. be born after March 31st, 1989.

DEADLINE:
Next deadline for sending applications is March 31st, 2025.

STIPEND:
The monthly scholarship amount is established in €750.00.

TO APPLY:
The following documents are required:

  1. A research proposal that includes a description of the area of study;
  2. Two recommendation letters;
  3. A curriculum vitae;
  4. A photocopy of the applicant’s passport, ID Card, or birth certificate.

For more information on how to apply, please view the official posting here.

Position Announcement | Fellowship in Critical Classical Studies

The Department of Classics at Brown University invites applications for two (2) two-year, non-renewable Postdoctoral Fellowships in Critical Classical Studies to begin July 1, 2025. We seek junior colleagues with terminal degrees (either Ph.D. or MFA) whose work directly addresses the classicization of the Ancient Greeks and Romans; critiques the structures of power, exclusion, erasure, and violence that have scaffolded past and present models of Ancient Greek and Roman Studies (i.e. Classics); and/or speculates about alternative models to studying these ancient cultures and others. Successful applicants will be appointed as Postdoctoral Research Associates.

The Fellowship is open to areas of research and creative practice not traditionally housed within Ancient Greek and Roman Studies (e.g. art, film, creative writing, translation studies, political science, language pedagogy, higher education studies, public humanities, museum studies, indigenous studies, decolonial studies, performance or performance history, music) and to more traditional subfields (e.g. art history, literary studies/philology, archaeology, ancient history, philosophy, reception studies). Ideal candidates position their work’s intervention in relation to other disciplines, fields, institutions, and/or industries. They prioritize making contributions to academic, artistic, and/or activist communities. The work can take the form of traditional scholarship (e.g. monographs and articles) or be pedagogical, public-facing, creative, or otherwise trans/inter/extra-disciplinary.

The fellows selected in this competition will join fellows already in residence and form a community committed to refining methodologies well established at Brown and in the field as well as to co-developing new approaches to Ancient Greek and Roman cultures.

Brown University seeks to recruit and retain a diverse workforce to maintain the excellence of the University, and to offer our students richly varied disciplines, perspectives, viewpoints, and ways of knowing, learning, and creating. Therefore, the Department of Classics particularly welcomes applications from members of groups that have been minoritized and underrepresented in academia. A required application form asks every applicant to summarize their approach to and experience in creating equitable, diverse, and inclusive communities. This history might include academic teaching, mentoring, and service, activism, or other forms of community engagement and leadership.

In lieu of formal teaching responsibilities, fellows will be given the time and support necessary to complete their projects during the fellowship term and to share those projects with communities on and off-campus. Each fellow should expect to host one departmental event (e.g. lecture, symposium, performance, screening) and one informal event (e.g. workshop, interview, open rehearsal, table read, write-on-site) that prioritize graduate students in the Department of Classics each academic year. They will also participate in regular cohort-building and mentoring activities.

Each fellow will earn a salary of $65,000 in year 1 and $70,000 in year 2. In addition to a full benefits package, each fellow will receive a research fund of $10,000 and access to a shared office space. Fellows are expected to be in residence for the full term of the fellowship and, if applicable, will receive a $3,000 moving allowance to ease the burden of relocation.

Further information, including application details, can be found here.

Any questions should be directed towards the chair of the Search Committee, Dr. Sasha-Mae Eccleston.

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