Archaeology News and Announcements

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

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Cultures and Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean Work-in-Progress Group Meeting

The next meeting of the Cultures and Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean work-in-progress group will be held on Tuesday, October 15 at 12:00pm in Rhode Island Hall, Room 008.

The discussion will center on a paper by Robyn Price (JIAAW) entitled, “On Sensory Archaeology”.

CRAM is an interdisciplinary group aimed at graduate students, postdocs, and faculty whose research interests encompass the ancient Mediterranean, understood broadly both chronologically and geographically, and is supported by the Program in Early Cultures. We discuss pre-circulated work in progress in an informal atmosphere over lunch. All are welcome; we tend to form a community of regulars, but you are also very welcome to drop in and out over the course of the year as your interests and schedule dictate.

Please email Lauren Arsenault at lauren_arsenault@brown.edu if you plan to attend by Wednesday, October 9th with your dietary requirements to book your free lunch. Note that there’s no RSVP required to attend and participate.

2-year postdoctoral position at Yale

Postdoc Ad: ARCHAIA, AY 24-25

Yale University seeks to appoint a Postdoctoral Associate for a two-year position beginning in the academic year 2025-2026 within Archaia: the Yale Program for the Study of Global Antiquity. Archaia is a collaborative forum that brings together scholars and graduate students working on early and pre-modern cultures and civilizations at Yale in the Humanities and Social Sciences in addition to the Divinity and Law Schools and various University collections and libraries, including the Yale University Art Gallery, the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Peabody Museum of Natural History, and the Institute for the Preservation of
Cultural Heritage. Participating departments and disciplines include Classics, East Asian Languages and Literatures, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, History, Religious Studies, Archaeology and Anthropology, History of Art, and the Divinity School. In addition to hosting conferences and colloquia, the year-long Ancient Societies Workshop (ASW), and study tours, Archaia offers a graduate qualification for students interested in research beyond departmental lines. For additional information, see https://archaia.yale.edu/certification. Information about past post-doctoral fellows can be found here.

Past Archaia seminars and ASW topics have included ancient music, comparative
linguistics in pre-modern languages, ancient comparative law, ancient ritual, antiquity through the digital humanities, and the archaeology of Dura Europos. Anticipated upcoming topics include environmental determinism, constructions of the human body and race and how these ideas travel cross culturally, and the archaeology of Gerasa; we are also open to other innovative and cross-disciplinary proposals for future workshops and core seminars. We especially welcome applicants working in areas beyond the ancient Mediterranean world. The postdoctoral associate is expected to take an active role in Archaia programming while pursuing research in their own area of expertise. Additionally, the associate’s duties include: (1) participating in the Archaia Steering Committee, coordinating the graduate certification program, and participating in the graduate forum as a mentor; (2) offering, in the first year, a graduate seminar and/or a study tour (the seminar may be connected with the tour); (3) in the second year of the appointment, co-teaching the Archaia core seminar with a Yale faculty member and/or co-organizing the Archaia Study Tour. The postdoctoral associate will receive guidance from and report to the Archaia co-chairs and will also be provided with at least one mentor from a field/department close to their area of training and expertise. Salary is commensurate with education and experience along with Yale’s benefits package that includes health insurance.

Requirements
• A Ph.D. in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Classics, East Asian Studies, South Asian Studies, History, Religious Studies, Archaeology, Anthropology, History of Art, or a related field.
• The intellectual training and trajectory of the postdoctoral associate must show a
commitment to cross-disciplinary or cross-cultural research in more than one of the areas, languages, and/or disciplines represented by Archaia.
• The successful applicant will be able to demonstrate a desire and ability to build collaborative relationships across departments and collections.
• We especially encourage applications from scholars underrepresented in the study of antiquity.

Applicants and referees should upload documentation via
Interfolio:  https://apply.interfolio.com/155704
Applicants must supply:
(1) a cover letter,
(2) a curriculum vitae,
(3) a research statement (1000 words max.) detailing the work that the associate wishes to pursue at Yale,
(4) three brief descriptions (not syllabi) of up to 500 words each, for
a) a co-taught global antiquity seminar to be offered as an Archaia core course;
b) a graduate seminar related to your own research specialization, and with some concern for global antiquity;
c) a travel study opportunity (5-10 days)
(5) a teaching portfolio (including teaching evaluations or other evidence of  teaching effectiveness and syllabi for courses taught or planned),
(6) three letters of recommendation addressed to the Chair of the Search Committee, Prof. Molly Zahn.

Review of applications will begin Dec. 1, 2024.
For any questions please contact the chair of the committee, Prof. Molly Zahn
(molly.zahn@yale.edu), and Keith Mazzadra (keith.mazzadra@yale.edu), Archaia Program administrator.

Yale University is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer. Yale values diversity among its students, faculty, and staff and especially welcomes applications from women, persons with disabilities, protected veterans, and underrepresented.

SCS Placement

The following advertisement has been added or updated on classicalstudies.org:

Position Title: Associate/Full Professor, Classical Archaeology
Institution Name: University of California, Los Angeles
Position Rank: Open
Area of Specialty: Archaeology
Application Deadline: 2024-11-01

The Department of Classics at the University of California, Los Angeles, has been authorized to make an appointment to a full-time position in Classical Archaeology at the rank of Associate or Full Professor, with tenure, effective July 1, 2025. We invite applications from scholars with expertise in any area of Classical Greek and Roman Archaeology. The successful candidate will be able to offer courses in Greek and/or Roman Archaeology at all levels and to participate in the interdepartmental Ph.D. program in Archaeology. It would also be customary for the successful candidate to be elected to affiliation with the UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology and to participate in its activities, including archaeological fieldwork.

The UCLA Classics Department is home to a productive community of scholars and teachers. Our members also participate in other UCLA interdisciplinary academic units, in addition to the Cotsen Institute, such as the new initiative in Global Antiquity, the Pourdavoud Center for the Study of the Iranian World, the Center for the Study of Religion, and the Program in Digital Humanities, and we would welcome applicants who could contribute to these units, as well.

The Ph.D. is required before the date of appointment, and applicants should either hold a tenured appointment or its equivalent, or be eligible to begin a tenured position. Candidates should have an outstanding record in research, teaching, and service. Candidates should also demonstrate a commitment to student mentoring/advising and to teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. We welcome candidates whose experience in teaching, research, or community service has prepared them to contribute to our commitment to diversity and excellence.

For a candidate of suitable rank and stature in the field, the Steinmetz Chair in Classical Archaeology may be awarded, which can assist in furthering the chairholder’s research.

Applicants should submit the materials listed below by November 1, 2024, after which date the search committee will begin to review applications:
• Letter of application, including a detailed research statement
• Current curriculum vitae
• Names and contact information for three recommenders
• Course evaluations and/or other material bearing on teaching effectiveness
• A representative article-length publication
• Statement on contributions to equity, diversity, and inclusion
• Reference check authorization release form
These materials must be submitted online at:
https://recruit.apo.ucla.edu/JPF09819

Informal inquiries may be directed to Professor David Blank, Chair of the Search Committee (blank@humnet.ucla.edu). Please cite the reference number for this search in all correspondence: JPF09819.
Staff contact (for help with the application process): Mark Kaminsky (mkaminsky@humnet.ucla.edu)

The Search Committee expects to begin meeting selected candidates remotely in November. In a second stage of the search, the committee will request letters of reference and additional materials, such as further samples of scholarly work and sample course syllabi.

View the entire advertisement on the SCS website at https://classicalstudies.org/placement-service/2024-2025/38490/associat…

_______________________________________________
SCSPlacementService mailing list
Replies to the list will not be read.  If you wish to send an e-mail to the Placement Service, send it to info@classicalstudies.org.

Six Modern and Contemporary Art Libraries

We are pleased to offer for sale the libraries of these distinguished scholars, art professionals and artists: Coosje van Bruggen/Claes Oldenburg, Marjory Jacobson, Stephen C. Foster/Estera Milman, Athena Tacha, Kirby Gookin and Hans Joachim Beyer. Catalogues of the libraries in pdf format are to be found on our Collections page on the Ars Libri website. Each library is offered complete.

Coosje van Bruggen/Claes Oldenburg
Contemporary Art: The Coosje van Bruggen/Claes Oldenburg Library
2,060 titles in circa 2,325 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Marjory Jacobson
Contemporary Art: The Library of Marjory Jacobson
Former Director of Exhibitions at Hayden Gallery, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Founder of Marjory Jacobson & Associates, art advisory firm
4,570 titles in over 4,700 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Athena Tacha
Athena Tacha: An Artist’s Library on Environmental Sculpture and Conceptual Art1,192 titles in 1,270 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Stephen C. Foster & Estera Milman
Studies in the Fine Arts: The Avant-Garde. The Library of Professor Stephen C. Foster, including The Library of Estera Milman
1,833 titles in circa 1925 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Kirby Gookin
Contemporary Art: The Reference Library of Professor Kirby Gookin, New York University
4,468 titles in over 4,525 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Hans Joachim Beyer
Contemporary Art: The European Panorama and Its American Counterparts: Boltanski, Bourgeois, Clemente, LeWitt, Rainer, Richter, Tuttle, Weiner. The Library of Hans Joachim Beyer, Bismarck-Verlag, Publisher of Artists Books & Print Portfolios
6,994 titles in over 7,360 volumes
Link to the catalogue

Click here to view all available collections at our website 

Please email us at orders@arslibri.com for inquiries and further details

 

 

Mountains of the Pharaohs: An In-Person Book talk with Zahi Hawass

Join us for a book talk with Dr. Zahi Hawass about the new paperback edition of his book Mountains of the Pharaohs: The Untold Story of the Pyramid Builders (AUC Press, 2024).

Hawass will walk us through the story of the pyramids, weaving archaeological data with a history of Egypt’s powerful pharaohs, and argues that the pyramids—including the Great Pyramid of Khufu, the only one of the Seven Wonders of the World still standing—were built by skilled craftsmen who took great pride in their work.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to hear from one of the world’s foremost experts on Ancient Egyptian history and you will get a chance to ask Dr. Hawass questions about the pyramid builders, so make sure to send in your questions before the event through the link below.

Register

Ewart Hall
113 Al Kasr Al Aini, AUC Tahrir Campus, Cairo Governorate 11511
View on map

Oct 08, 2024 07:00pm
Add to Google · Outlook Web · Outlook Mobile · Yahoo · iCal

U2 Aerial Photography of Egypt

Please join the Center for Digital Scholarship for our next DH Salon on Thursday, October 10, 2024 at noon EST via Zoom** or in person in the Digital Scholarship Lab (room 137) in the Rockefeller Library. Free and open to the public. Lunch will be provided.

Laurel Bestock, “U2 Aerial Photography of Egypt”

In 1959 the CIA flew two reconnaissance flights using high-altitude U2 spy planes over Egypt. The photographs taken on these flights have recently been declassified, and hold a wealth of information relevant to archaeologists, demographers, and other researchers. This presentation reports on the progress of a CDS-supported Brown/Toronto team that is digitizing the large-scale negatives from these flights and building a website to make the georeferenced images freely available.

Laurel Bestock is Professor of Archaeology and the Ancient World and Egyptology and Assyriology, Associate Professor of History of Art and Architecture at Brown University.

Register here

 ** Zoom link is https://brown.zoom.us/j/98789975614 

* The DH Salon series is a regular, informal presentation series bringing together digital humanities work across the Brown campus. Join us either in the Digital Scholarship Lab (Room 137) on the first floor of the Rockefeller Library (w/ lunch!) or on Zoom: https://brown.zoom.us/j/98789975614). See attached or the library events calendar for a full list of the Fall 2024 DH Salons

 
We look forward to seeing you there.

SBA October Update

Regional SBA Writing Affiliation Groups – In celebration of the 15 year anniversary of the Society of Black Archaeologists in 2026, we are organizing writing groups to celebrate our collective power in knowledge production, while at the same time gathering across different regions to curate the next era of SBA scholarship. We hope to engage with members from across the writing spectrum reaching students, emerging scholars, advanced career writers, and those new to the writing process in the world of archaeology. This is about building regional hubs to write together and generate something new to mark this milestone in SBA history! Launching in Fall 2024.

Deadline to submit interest form October 15th: https://forms.gle/PNAm81hrx4cL167T6

Position Announcement | Assistant Professor of Archaeology, tenure-track

Work type: Faculty Full-Time
Location: Denver, CO
Categories: Faculty
Division: Arts & Humanities/Social Sciences

The Department of Anthropology at the University of Denver invites applications for an assistant professor tenure-track position with an anticipated starting date of September 2025. They seek a candidate with specialization in North American Archaeology or Latin American Archaeology whose work addresses one or both of the following departmental priorities:

  • Archaeology: digital/emergent practices, and non-invasive archaeological methods. For example: lidar, drone-based data collection, integration with GIS, bridging heritage management and technology with descendant communities.
  • Heritage studies: Traditional ecological knowledge, folklore, oral history, digital archives/mapping, migration and mobility, critical heritage studies, natural resource use, or the application of heritage-based technologies or frameworks to archaeological practice.

The successful candidate will be encouraged to integrate the extant archaeological collections housed in the University of Denver Museum of Anthropology (DUMA) into their teaching and/or research. To do so, they may need to collaborate with faculty and staff outside the department for shared university resources (e.g., material analysis laboratories, GIS).

The successful candidate will teach five courses per year over three quarters (fall, winter, spring). The ideal candidate, in addition to courses in anthropology and their regional area of specialization, should be able to offer courses that are accessible and appealing to undergraduate students who represent a broad range of majors. They will also teach courses that provide methodological, analytical, and/or theoretical training for students in the MA program. Some upper-divisional courses will be open to a mix of advanced undergraduate and entry-level MA students. Interest in and the ability to teach community engaged and/or service learning courses would be welcomed. Candidates may also be asked to establish and teach an archaeological or applied field school.

Essential Functions
  • Teach five courses per year over three quarters (fall, winter, spring) that reflect candidate’s area of specialization.
  • Teach courses that serve the University’s common (general education) curriculum.
  • Contribute to the Department’s MA programs in archaeology, cultural anthropology, and/or museum and heritage studies.
  • Mentor and advise undergraduate and graduate students.
  • Work effectively with DUMA staff in making use of collections and other museum resources (such as the gallery).
  • Demonstrate knowledge of and ability to work effectively with diverse populations; implement inclusive excellence principles in the classroom.
  • Serve as a good academic citizen within the Department of Anthropology, the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, the University of Denver, the profession, and community beyond.
    Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities
  • Advanced scholarly expertise (PhD level) in the field of archaeology or related field
  • Successful publication of peer-reviewed scholarship
  • Field experience in archaeological research, cultural heritage, and resource policy and management
  • Excellent skills in oral and written communication
  • Excellent teaching skills
  • Ability to interact constructively with a diverse population of faculty, staff, and undergraduate students.
Required Qualifications
  • Ph.D. in anthropology or other closely related field
  • Evidence of active research agenda and record of publication
  • Proven record of successful teaching experience
Preferred Qualifications

We seek qualified candidates who can contribute to our diversity and to the advancement of inclusive excellence through their teaching, research, and service.
The Department is particularly interested in candidates whose teaching and research focus on North America or Latin America. Must have demonstrated interest in and the ability to teach community engaged and/or service learning courses would be welcomed. Must have a strong commitment to department and university service

Application Deadline

For consideration, please submit your application materials by 4:00 p.m. (MST) October 25, 2024.

Candidates must apply online through jobs.du.edu to be considered. Only applications submitted online will be accepted.

Salary Grade

The salary grade for this position is UC

Salary Range: The salary range for this position is $75,000-$80,000

The University of Denver has provided a compensation range that represents its good faith estimate of what the University may pay for the position at the time of posting. The University may ultimately pay more or less than the posted compensation range. The salary offered to the selected candidate will be determined based on factors such as the qualifications of the selected candidate, departmental budget availability, internal salary equity considerations, and available market information, but not based on a candidate’s sex or any other protected status.

Benefits: The University of Denver offers excellent benefits, including medical, dental, retirement, paid time off, tuition benefit and ECO pass. The University of Denver is a private institution that empowers students who want to make a difference. Learn more about the University of Denver.

Application Materials

Please include the following documents with your application:

  • Letter of application (including a statement of areas of research and teaching interest)
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • Teaching Philosophy
  • Separate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) statement – The University of Denver and the Department of Anthropology are committed to building a diverse and inclusive educational environment.
  • Applicants are requested to include in their cover letter and supporting materials information about how they will advance this commitment in their teaching.
  • Names and email addresses of three recommenders.

Uncovering Stars in an Egyptian Temple: The New Sky over Esna

Free Hybrid Lecture

Uncovering Stars in an Egyptian Temple: The New Sky over Esna

Wednesday, September 18, 6:00–7:00 pm ET.

Christian Leitz, Director of the Department of Egyptology, Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies (AINES), University of Tübingen, Germany

The pronaos of Esna is one of the last examples of ancient Egyptian temple architecture. In 2018, the University of Tübingen, in cooperation with the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, launched a complete restoration of the soot-covered pronaos. Six years later, the colorful astronomical ceiling and columns have been cleaned, uncovering nearly 200 ink inscriptions previously undescribed.

This lecture will give an overview of the astronomical ceiling, including the path of the sun and moon, stars used for keeping time, known and unknown Egyptian constellations, and the twelve signs of the zodiac.

Free admission. Free event parking at the 52 Oxford Street Garage. Presented by the Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East and the Harvard Museums of Science and Culture.

Register here for in person attendance.

Register here for online attendance.

Call for Applications | 2025-2026 Getty Scholar Program at the Villa

 

The J. Paul Getty Museum is pleased to announce the research theme for the 2025 – 2026 Getty Scholars Program at the Villa, “Religious Experience in Antiquity.” Applications for residential scholar grants are due on 1 October 2024 by 5pm PDT.

Annual Theme: Religious Experience in Antiquity

A multitude of religions flourished in the Mediterranean and beyond from the second millennium BCE through the Late Roman era. Addressing the diversity of faiths and rituals, scholars will consider the consequences of contact between the Greek and Roman worlds and neighboring civilizations of the Near East, Africa, and transalpine Europe. The intersection of religions entailed continuity and coexistence as well as intolerance and conflict. Conquest, commerce, migration, and the foundation of “international” sanctuaries facilitated new forms of worship. These interactions, which both reflected and shaped religious experience, were widely manifested in art and material culture. Engaging systems of belief that range from state-sponsored religion and local cults to private devotion, researchers will investigate how communities reconciled the spiritually charged and socially fluid landscapes around them.

The Getty Scholars Program at the Villa focuses on the Classical World in Context, a multi-year initiative to explore the interconnectivity between the ancient Mediterranean region and the cultures of Africa and Eurasia. Priority will be given to research projects that apply interdisciplinary, comparative, transregional, and diachronic approaches to art, material culture, literature, and other sources for the study of antiquity.

Deadline: 1 October 2024 by 5pm PDT

How to Apply: The research theme statement, as well as detailed instructions, eligibility requirements, and a link to apply are available online.

Eligibility: Residential grants are available for established scholars who have attained distinction in their fields and received their PhD more than 5 years ago.

Address inquiries to:

Attn: (Type of Grant)

The Getty Foundation

Phone: 310.440.7374

E-mail: VillaScholars@getty.edu; researchgrants@getty.edu

 

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