Paperback ISBN: 9789464271294 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464271300 | Imprint: Sidestone Press Academics | Format: 210x280mm | 254 pp. | Language: English | 9 illus. (bw) | 26 illus. (fc) | Keywords: ancient Egypt; Egyptology; bodies; corporealities; iconography; material culture; archaeology | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/l2o8i9j0k1 | CC-license: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0Bodies are immanent element of socio-cultural negotiation. Since the 19th century, Egyptology has produced vast knowledge on the ancient Egyptian bodies (human, divine, animal), however, mainly by focusing on funerary aspects of ancient Egyptian culture. Different paradigm shifts and turns of the last few decades (hermeneutics, semiotics, social-constructivism, ontology etc.), echo through Egyptology, but are still not part of the dominant discourse. This is also the case for the so-called “body turn”, an important epistemological turning point, that came largely unnoticed in Egyptology. Previous body centred Egyptological publications are either too specific in their focus or too broad in their presentation of Ancient Egyptian corporealities.
To balance this out and reflect the latest state of research, this volume brings together selected contributions from the fields of Egyptology and Northeast African Archaeology. The focus is on both conceptualizations of the bodies by ancient Egyptians and Egyptologists. The topics of the contributions cover familiar but also new aspects. They range from division of labour, disability, gender roles, erotic, magic, fragmented and narrated bodies, other-than-human corporealities, to questions of ethics and the place of Egyptology in current approaches to past bodies. Various textual, pictorial, and archaeological sources, as well as human remains, are analyzed both from synchronic and diachronic perspectives.
From the theoretical and methodological point of view, the publication provides deeper insights into a number of different approaches and their application to the ancient material (among others: osteoarchaeology, socio-cultural anthropology, semiotics, new materialism, ontology, etc.), which makes the book an important reading for all career stage Egyptologists (students to professionals) and the broader interested public.
1. Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Corporealities
Uroš Matić & Dina SerovaSOMATIC EXPERIENCES
2. Corporealities of Physical Labor and the Origins of the Nile Valley States: Engendered Differences in Predynastic Egypt and the Kingdom of Kerma
Jared Carballo-Perez & Sarah A. Schrader3. Human Body Parts in Ancient Egyptian Rock Art
Paweł Lech Polkowski4. Failing in being “proper men”: Disabled, maimed and injured bodies through ancient Egyptian frames of war
Uroš MatićGENDER NORMS AND AMBIGUITIES
5. Sex, Gender and Queerness in Ancient Egypt
Alexandra von Lieven6. Interpreting Hatshepsut’s (Fe)Male body
Filip Taterka7. “I Put a Spell on You”. The Body as Subject, Object and Medium in Graeco-Egyptian Erotic Magic
Svenja NagelTEXTUAL BODIES: NARRATION AND BEYOND
8. Bodies Narrated: The Depiction of Human Bodies in Ancient Egyptian Storytelling
Nikolaos Lazaridis9. Objects of Desire: Naked Goddesses in Two Ancient Egyptian Narrative Texts
Dina Serova10. Corporeality and Bodies in Ancient Egyptian Demonology
Gabriele Mario ConteTHE FUTURE FOR BODIES THAT MATTERED
11. Collecting, Studying, and Exhibiting Human Bodies. Considerations on the Ethics of Scholarship and Education
Rainer Brömer & Tanja Pommerening12. Approaching Ancient Egyptian Bodies: Cognition, Phenomenology, Ontology, and Beyond?
Rune Nyord

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