Center for Ancient Studies at Penn

Center for Ancient Studies at Penn The Center for Ancient Studies at the University of Pennsylvania facilitates interaction between ind

The Center for Ancient Studies (CAS) at the University of Pennsylvania strives to bring together faculty and students, as well as members of the greater Philadelphia community, who share a passion for the ancient world. Our Center aims to model an expansive and global vision of "the ancient world," spanning Greco-Roman cultures and the Near East but also Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Penn's CAS

is based on the idea that scholars of antiquity can benefit immeasurably from contact and conversation with each other across different areas and disciplines. Our mission is thus to support a broad variety of academic events pertaining to pre-modern cultures and societies. Every year, we host a major Annual Symposium on a theme or questions of cross-cultural concern in the fall and an interdisciplinary Graduate Colloquium in the spring. We also co-sponsor many lectures, conferences, and workshops across campus. In addition, we compile a weekly e-newsletter of events of interest at Penn, in Philadelphia, and across the region.

Come to the CAS graduate conference, "The Aftermaths of Conflict: Responses to Human and Material Trauma in the Ancient ...
04/13/2023

Come to the CAS graduate conference, "The Aftermaths of Conflict: Responses to Human and Material Trauma in the Ancient World" this weekend!

Keynote address by Dr. Kashi Gomez at 5:30 PM Friday 4/14 in Widener Lecture Hall, Penn Museum

Panels 9:30-5:30 Saturday 4/15 in Widener Lecture Hall, Penn Museum

04/25/2022

Before our Keynote Address for "Borders and Boundaries" on Friday 4/29, we will be hosting a Reception/Happy Hour at City Tap House, 3925 Walnut Street, from 4-5:30. Drink tickets and appetizers on us for those who would like to come! Plus, the opportunity for conversation with Dr. Solange Ashby and many of our presenters.

Our graduate conference, "Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World," is less than two weeks away! Keynote address at ...
04/21/2022

Our graduate conference, "Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World," is less than two weeks away! Keynote address at 6:00 PM Friday 4/29 in Rainey Auditorium, Penn Museum, panels 9:00-5:15 Saturday, 4/30, Widener Lecture Hall. We've invited graduate students and early career scholars from across the country, (as well as several Penn locals,) for an exciting discussion of this theme, and we have also reserved time for public Q & A. Come out and join us! (See "Events" tab for more details.)

DEADLINE EXTENDED/HYBRID FORMAT: With a dozen confirmed excellent graduate presenters so far, the deadline for submissio...
02/25/2022

DEADLINE EXTENDED/HYBRID FORMAT: With a dozen confirmed excellent graduate presenters so far, the deadline for submissions for our "Borders and Boundaries" conference, April 29th-30th, has been extended to March 10th. We are also welcoming submissions from those who would like to present remotely. See below for full announcement:

The deadline for abstract submissions to the Penn Center for Ancient Studies 13th Annual Graduate Student Conference, “Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World,” has been extended to March 10th, 2022. In addition to further in-person submissions, the conference is also welcoming submissions from those who wish to present remotely, via Zoom, for an overall hybrid format. Please see below for our full Call for Papers:

The Center for Ancient Studies at the University of Pennsylvania is proud to present our 13th annual Graduate Student Conference, “Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World.” The conference will be held in a hybrid format, welcoming presentations both in person and on Zoom, at the University of Pennsylvania from Friday April 29th- Saturday April 30th.

The Penn Museum is requiring masking indoors. We will continue to monitor the public health situation closely to protect the health and safety of all participants.

We are also pleased to announce that our keynote speaker will be Dr. Solange Ashby (UCLA).

In recent years, questions about identity have proven deeply provocative to scholars working in both contemporary social contexts and the ancient world. Arguably, it is impossible to conceive of identity without boundaries. What separates one identity from another? Physical borders, fortified to a greater or lesser extent, separate states, and this inevitably impacts the social and economic life of their inhabitants. But the way such political borders are conceptualized also has a profound effect on the self-understanding of those participating in cultural discourses. As examples, we may take the self-presentation of ancient Mesopotamian rulers as “king[s] of lands,” or “of the four corners of the earth,” or Roman notions of an “imperium sine fine.”

Yet it is not only political borders that shape our internal categorizations, and hence comprehension, of the world around us. What does it mean, for both the individual and the community, to pass from boyhood to manhood, or from girlhood to womanhood? What boundaries lie between sacred and profane space, and why are these thresholds laid out in particular ways in different contexts? What differentiates rural from urban space, and why? What markers are emphasized when drawing boundaries between ethnic identities? When, where, and why do such ethnic identities mingle, fuse, or refuse to do so? All of these questions are vital for understanding how we map and navigate the world we live in, and have been so since ancient times. This conference invites graduate students from across disciplines related to ancient studies to explore the wide variety of productive questions raised by considering borders and boundaries. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

• Political, social, and economic development in border zones between states.

• The delineation of sacred space, and its contrast with the profane.

• Coming of age rituals as the boundaries between childhood and adulthood.

• Citizenship and non-citizenship in ancient societies.

• Boundaries between urban and rural space, or within urban space.

• Cultural border regions, zones of interaction and hybridity, and so called “middle grounds.”

• Cross-fertilization between cultural groups in intellectual, artistic, and religious history.

We welcome papers from a variety of disciplines, and encourage submissions from all geographic and temporal corners of ancient studies, broadly construed. One of the key objectives of this conference is to encourage fruitful, professional interaction and collaboration between students and young scholars in ancient studies who otherwise have limited opportunity to be stimulated by one another’s work due to disciplinary boundaries.

Please send abstracts of up to 250 words for a 20 minute presentation in PDF format to [email protected] no later than Thursday March 10th (03/10/2022). Please include your name and institutional affiliation in the body text of your email. Notifications will be given to all additional applicants no later than 3/20.

If you have any questions regarding the conference, please contact the chair of the organizing committee, Kyle West, at the same email address above.

Call for Papers: "Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World"The Center for Ancient Studies at the University of Pennsy...
01/20/2022

Call for Papers: "Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World"

The Center for Ancient Studies at the University of Pennsylvania is proud to present our 13th annual Graduate Student Conference, “Borders and Boundaries in the Ancient World.” The conference will be held in person at the University of Pennsylvania from Friday April 29th-Saturday April 30th.

Please be aware that the University is requiring full vaccination, including a booster, for entry into campus buildings; additionally, double-masking will be required indoors. We will continue to monitor the public health situation closely to protect the health and safety of all participants.

We are also pleased to announce that our keynote speaker will be Dr. Solange Ashby (UCLA).

In recent years, questions about identity have proven deeply provocative to scholars working in both contemporary social contexts and the ancient world. Arguably, it is impossible to conceive of identity without boundaries. What separates one identity from another? Physical borders, fortified to a greater or lesser extent, separate states, and this inevitably impacts the social and economic life of their inhabitants. But the way such political borders are conceptualized also has a profound effect on the self-understanding of those participating in cultural discourses. As examples, we may take the self-presentation of ancient Mesopotamian rulers as “king[s] of lands,” or “of the four corners of the earth,” or Roman notions of an “imperium sine fine.”

Yet it is not only political borders that shape our internal categorizations, and hence comprehension, of the world around us. What does it mean, for both the individual and the community, to pass from boyhood to manhood, or from girlhood to womanhood? What boundaries lie between sacred and profane space, and why are these thresholds laid out in particular ways in different contexts? What differentiates rural from urban space, and why? What markers are emphasized when drawing boundaries between ethnic identities? When, where, and why do such ethnic identities mingle, fuse, or refuse to do so? All of these questions are vital for understanding how we map and navigate the world we live in, and have been so since ancient times. This conference invites graduate students from across disciplines related to ancient studies to explore the wide variety of productive questions raised by considering borders and boundaries. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

-Political, social, and economic development in border zones between states.

-The delineation of sacred space, and its contrast with the profane.

-Coming of age rituals as the boundaries between childhood and adulthood.

-Citizenship and non-citizenship in ancient societies.

-Boundaries between urban and rural space, or within urban space.

-Cultural border regions, zones of interaction and hybridity, and so called “middle grounds.”

-Cross-fertilization between cultural groups in intellectual, artistic, and religious history.

We welcome papers from a variety of disciplines, and encourage submissions from all geographic and temporal corners of ancient studies, broadly construed. One of the key objectives of this conference is to encourage fruitful, professional interaction and collaboration between students and young scholars in ancient studies who otherwise have limited opportunity to be stimulated by one another’s work due to disciplinary boundaries.

Please send abstracts of up to 250 words for a 20 minute presentation in PDF format to [email protected] no later than Friday, February 18th (02/18/2022). Please include your name and institutional affiliation in the body text of your email. Notifications will be given to all applicants in early March.

If you have any questions regarding the conference, please contact the chair of the organizing committee, Kyle West, at the same email address above.

Check out the next event from the Penn Cultural Heritage Center, coming up next Thursday, April 22 at 12:30pm.
04/16/2021

Check out the next event from the Penn Cultural Heritage Center, coming up next Thursday, April 22 at 12:30pm.

Join us on Thursday, April 22 for "Heritage, Rights, and Land Reclamation for California Native American Tribes!"

tribes across the United States have historically been dispossessed of their reservation lands through legal maneuvering, outright deceit, and formal policy. This land loss is compounded for tribes that also lost their federal status through administrative action or “termination” laws enacted by Congress. Especially in northeastern , which has a high number of terminated and unrecognized tribes, the restitution of former reservation lands is a way to strengthen communities in the present.

Regaining land ownership represents the work of in practice. This presentation celebrates the restitution of a portion of the original Colfax Rancheria to the Colfax-Todds Valley Consolidated Tribe by a private donor. Our presenters explore their aspirations and hopes for the future of the Tribe, and how their experience can be a model for other tribes seeking to reclaim their home places.

Thursday, April 22, 12:30 PM ET
Register: bit.ly/3x030Rx

We have decided to extend the application deadline for our Spring Graduate Workshop Event to March 1, 2021. If you are a...
02/19/2021

We have decided to extend the application deadline for our Spring Graduate Workshop Event to March 1, 2021. If you are a graduate student with an interest in public scholarship, we encourage you to apply! More information may be found here: https://www.sas.upenn.edu/ancient/gradconf2020.html

Greetings! This is a reminder that applications for our Spring Graduate Workshop are due in one week on February 22nd. M...
02/15/2021

Greetings! This is a reminder that applications for our Spring Graduate Workshop are due in one week on February 22nd. More information about the event and the application process may be found here: https://www.sas.upenn.edu/ancient/gradconf2020.html

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