Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Open Access Journal: Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti

 [First posted in AWOL 19 March 2018, updated 20 Janiary 2026]

Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti
ISSN: 2532-0289

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Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti is a peer-reviewed open access journal which focuses on archaeological research into the Landscape Archaeology. Studies of sites, results of scientific excavations and studies on artefacts found in the excavations fall into this field. The journal accepts unpublished scientific contributions characterized by originality and innovation. The journal accepts contributions related to any specific geographical region and relevant to any period, from prehistory to the Middle Ages. 

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  • Supplemento al N° 6 (2021)

    Il numero racchiude parte dei contributi presentati durante il Seminario di Studi Confronti in
    Cittadella: la Scuola di Specializzazione in Beni Archeologici di Cagliari incontra la Scuola di
    Specializzazione in Beni Archeologici di Matera, tenutosi nei giorni 5-6 aprile 2019 presso la
    Cittadella dei Musei ‘G. Lilliu’ di Cagliari, luogo che, oltre ad ospitare il principale polo
    museale della città, costituisce la ‘bella’ sede staccata del Dipartimento di Lettere, Lingue e
    Beni Culturali della facoltà di Studi Umanistici dell’Università cagliaritana.

  • Supplement to issue 2

    Notizie & Scavi della Sardegna Nuragica.

    Abstract Book del I Congresso Regionale (Serri, 20-22  aprile 2017)

  • No 1 (2016)

    Questo 1° numero contiene gli Atti del Convegno di Studi
    Daedaleia. Le torri nuragiche oltre lʼetà del Bronzo
    Cagliari, Cittadella dei Musei, 19-21 aprile 2012)
    curati da E. Trudu, G. Paglietti, M. Muresu

    Impaginazione a cura di E. Cruccas, M. Cabras, G. A. Arca,  M. Todde, C. Parodo

     

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     See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies



    Open Access Monograph Series: Proceedings of the International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies, Vienna

     [First posted in AWOL 1 March 2023, updated (new URLs) 20 January 2026]
     
     

    The International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies is an annual conference taking place annually in Vienna, Austria, since 1996. The conference brings together professionals and scholars from the diverse fields of cultural heritage, including archaeology, building history, art history, conservation, and museum educational services amongst others, who are interested in the application of technology to facilitate and enhance the research, conservation, valorisation and dissemination of cultural heritage in all its forms. The contributions come from scholars and academics, public and commercial cultural heritage professionals, developers, and engineers and other stakeholders in cultural heritage. The conference is a major plattform for the exchange of ideas and innovations in the field and also for the critical discussion of the impact, consequences and opportunities that arise with the application of technology in the cultural heritage field. The participants of the conference come from all over the world, with a majority of them coming from Europe.

    The conference is organized in Sessions where contributions to specific topics are discussed by specialists and those interested. The program is supplemented with Poster- and App-presentations. Abstracts that have been accepted and presented at the conference can then be submitted as paper for the proceedings and will be published after going through the peer-review-process. The authors who decide not to hand in a full paper and also authors of the posters and apps can publish their contributions as short papers, which will be reviewed by the editorial team and only.

    Besides the sessions, currently disputed and emerging topics of the field are being discussed in the form of round table discussions. A summary of the single contributions the round tables are published as short papers in the proceedings.

  • Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies 2021
    Vol. 26 No. Preview (2021)

    This is a preview of the finished papers of the 2021 Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies. The final Version, to which the dois refer will be published and archived in the Propylaeum ebook series.

  • Cover Image of CHNT 25 Proceedings

    Artificial Intelligence. New Pathways to Cultural Heritage. Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies 2020
    Vol. 25 (2022)

    The 25th international Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies took place in 2020 in the city hall of Vienna under the headline “Artificial Intelligence – New Pathways Towards Cultural Heritage”.
    The contributions deal with the application of computational approaches in all fields of cultural heritage, with a special emphasis on the utilisation of “Artificial Intelligence”. The topics include Remote Sensing, Data Acquisition and Modelling, and Methods for the analysis and presentation of digital data in archaeology and cultural heritage. The volume also contains abstracts on the round table discussions held, and the posters presented at the conference, and a special session which was dedicated towards the 25th anniversary of the conference.

    The full text of the volume, is published and available at Propylaeum, Heidelberg under the doi https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.1045

  • Monumental Computations. Digital archaeology of large urban and underground infrastructures. Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies 2019
    Vol. 24 (2021)

    The international conference "Cultural Heritage and New Technologies" took place in 2019 on the theme "Monumental Computations - Digital archaeology of large urban and underground infrastructures" at the Vienna City Hall.
    The conference papers address the challenges of large urban development projects for the responsible organizers, whose goal is to preserve the cultural heritage of the cities concerned as much as possible. In this context, computer-based approaches are indispensable in all steps of a large urban development project.

    The full text of the volume, is published and available at Propylaeum, Heidelberg under the doi https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.747

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    And see AWOL's Alphabetical List of Open Access Monograph Series in Ancient Studies

     

     

    21stCentury Popular Classics

    Volume Editors: Amanda Potter, Caitlan Smith, Jenny Messenger, Rossana Zetti
    Series Editor: Trevor Fear 

    CONTENTS

    Introduction

    PAPER ONE: Myth, Technology, and Love in Spike Jones’ Her [abstract] [full paper]
    Rocki Wentzel (Augustana University)

    PAPER TWO: “Benefits of a Classical Education”: The Dynamics of Classical Education in ABC’s Revenge [abstract] [full paper]
    Dan Curley (Skidmore College USA)

    PAPER THREE: Redirecting the gaze: The Woman and the Gladiator on Television in the Twenty-First Century [abstract] [full paper]
    Fiona Hobden (University of Liverpool) and Amanda Potter (Open University)

    PAPER FOUR: Iphigenia in the Buffer Zone: A Site-Specific Performance of Euripides’ Iphigenia in Aulis in Nicosia, Cyprus [abstract] [full paper]
    Magdalena Zira (theatre director)

    PAPER FIVE: Myth on the Wall: Images of Antiquity in Contemporary Street Art [abstract] [full paper]

    Colleen Kron (The Ohio State University)

    PAPER SIX: The Classical Catwalk: Fashioning the Ancient World on the Runway [abstract] [full paper]
    Stacie Raucci (Union College)

    About the authors

     

    Open Access Journal: Polymnia

    [First posted in AWOL 20 February 2017, updated (new URLs) 20 December 2026]

    Polymnia
    ISSN: 2491-1704
    Revue Polymnia
    The international network Polymnia, created in 1999 by Jacqueline Fabre-Serris and Françoise Graziani to promote the study of the mythographical tradition in Europe from Antiquity to the 17th Century has developed two types of activities: a programme of conferences in the various partner institutions and the publications of bilingual texts with translations and notes in the series Mythographes (Presses Universitaires du Septentrion).

    The journal Polymnia continues the research programme of the network. It offers a space for interdisciplinary and diachronic reflection and debate about mythographical texts in Antiquity, in the Middles Ages, and in the Renaissance.

    Le réseau de recherche international Polymnia, créé en 1999 par Jacqueline Fabre-Serris et Françoise Graziani pour promouvoir l’étude de la tradition mythographique de l’Antiquité au 17° siècle, a développé deux sortes d’activités: des colloques entre les universités partenaires et une collection de textes bilingues, la collection « Mythographes », publiée aux Presses Universitaires du Septentrion.

    La revue électronique Polymnia poursuit le programme de recherche du réseau. Elle propose un espace de réflexion et de débat, interdisciplinaire et diachronique, spécifiquement consacré aux textes mythographiques de l’Antiquité à la Renaissance.

    Numéro 7 | 2022

    Charles Delattre Présentation [Texte intégral]

    Marcos Martinho Teágenes de Régio e Metrodoro de Lâmpsaco. Acerca da paternidade da exegese alegórica dos mitos homérico [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Scott Smith Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey in Hyginus’ Fabulae [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Sarah Spence The Mythography of Proserpina. Geography and Power [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Julieta Cardigni Una versión tardoantigua de un mito homérico. Concubitus Martis et Veneris de Reposiano [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Valeria Flavia Lovato Porgere l’(altra)… coscia. Oscuri proverbi bizantini e insoliti fatti troiani [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Tommaso Braccini L’anello del Ciclope. L’episodio di Polifemo tra Omero, il Dolopathos e il folklore [Résumé][Texte intégral]

    Philip Ford Les Problèmes homériques d’Héraclite le rhéteur à la Renaissance [Texte intégral]

  • Numéro 1 | 2015
  • Numéro 2 | 2016
  • Numéro 3 | 2017
  • Numéro 4 | 2019
  • Numéro 5 | 2020
  • Numéro 6 | 2021
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    Monday, January 19, 2026

    ANIMATING ANTIQUITY: HARRYHAUSEN AND THE CLASSICAL TRADITION

    Volume Editors: Steven Green and Penny Goodman
    Series Editor: Trevor Fear

    CONTENTS

    Introduction

    PAPER 1  Ray Harryhausen and the other Gods: Greek Divinity in Jason and the Argonauts and Clash of the Titans
    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (University of Edinburgh)

    PAPER 2 From Gamer to Animator: The Evolving Role of Zeus in Harryhausen’s Jason and the Argonauts and Clash of the Titans
    Stephen Trzaskoma (University of New Hampshire, US)

    PAPER 3   Greek Elements in the Sinbad Movies of Ray Harryhausen: A Lesson in Reception
    Antony Keen (Open University)

    PAPER 4  The Look of Harryhausen’s Cyclops: Human v. Monster in the Eye of the Beholder
    Eleanor OKell (University of Leeds)

    PAPER 5   “The Dragon-green, the Luminous, the Dark, the Serpent-haunted Sea”: Monsters, Landscape and Gender in Clash of the Titans (1981 and 2010)
    Liz Gloyn (University of Birmingham)

    PAPER 6   Perseus on the Psychiatrist’s Couch in Leterrier’s Clash of the Titans (2010): Harryhausen Reloaded for 21st Century
    Steven J. Green (University of Leeds)

    About the authors

     


     

    New Open Access Journal: Essays in Long Late Antiquity

     
     

    Essays in Long Late Antiquity (ELLA) is a newly-created Open Access, peer-reviewed journal positioned in the field of first millennium studies, a research framework that has gained momentum in recent years. The journal moves away from a Western European periodization of late antiquity in order to entice interdisciplinary and superregional approaches. Therefore, the journal is open to submissions dealing with circa the second to the ninth centuries (ca. 100 – 800 CE) and the broader Afro-Eurasian region, taking a stand against disciplinary siloing and recognizing increasing interconnectivity in this period. Submissions dealing with individual periods and places within this wider geographic and temporal scope are also welcome.

    ELLA acts as a place of publication for those in history, archaeology, art history, religious studies, and philology. It fosters exchange between researchers often separated by disciplinary boundaries, offering them the chance to publish shorter essays and translations of late antique sources alongside traditional journal articles.

    The first issue will appear in Spring 2026.

     See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies 

     

    Heinrich Brugsch et scientia moderna

    Новосибирск: Панов М.В.

    (Egyptian Texts series. Vol. XXIV). 2025. 500 p.

    The present volume is dedicated to the famous German scholar H. Brugsch. Publication of the Catalogue of the Christian liturgical books and three Egyptian papyri from the Imperial Public library in St. Petersburg compiled by H. Brugsch in Berlin in 1862 is of particular importance. It is a specific book in the ET series: eight researchers from different countries have contributed to this project. The reports are in Russian, German, French, and English; scientific papers, presented in three chapters with collective lists of abbreviations and bibliographical references, cover various periods of ancient Egyptian history.