Date: May 6th, 2023
Location: ARCE Grand Salon, 2 Midan Simon Bolivar, Garden City, Cairo
8:30-8:55 Registration
8:55 Welcome remarks: Dr. Yasmin El Shazly, ARCE Deputy Director for Research and Programs
9:00-10:30 Session 1—Through the Lens of People
Moderator: Khaled Hassan
9:00—Hoda Yousef, Dennison University
Tracing the Legacy of the Qasim Amin Across Sources
9:30—Wendy Doyon, University of Pennsylvania
Colonial, Indigenous, or Other? The world of an archaeological rayyis in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, 1914
10:00—Mohamed Ibrahim, Ain Shams University
Mamluk Chivalry through Military Painted Manuscripts and War Equipment
10:30-11:00 Coffee Break
11:00-12:30 Session 2—Through the Lens of Places
Moderator: Naglaa Ezz Eldeen
11:00—Julia Viani Puglisi, Harvard University
Drawing the line: Limitations and (re)sources of the Central Field Cemetery at Giza
11:30—Khaled Hassan, Cairo University
Graffiti in the Old Kingdom tombs of Deir el-Gabrawi at Assiut
12:00—Briana Jackson, Independent Scholar
Atenism from Sinai to Sudan
12:30-1:00 Lightning Round
Moderator: Kea Johnston
12:30—Leah Wolfe, Cambridge University
Bilad al-Sham as a laboratory of reform for Muhammad ‘Ali’s Egypt? Egyptian rule in Syria, 1831-1841
12:40—Sam Wilder, Universität Paderborn
Poetic Culture and the Imagination of the Literary Canon in the Mamluk Age
12:50—Sarah Dwider, Northwestern University
Artists of the High Dam: Representation of the Aswan High Dam in Egyptian Modern Art, 1962-1970
1:00-2:30 Lunch
2:30-4:00 Session 3—Through the Lens of Things
Moderator: Hoda Yousef
2:30—Naglaa Ezz Eldeen, Helwan University
The Papyrus of Hor (Cairo JE 32887- SR IV 930) A Ptolemaic Memphite Book of the Dead
3:00—Kea Johnston, University of California/Berkeley
Unseen Hands: Coffin Workshops at Akhmim in the First Millennium BCE
3:30—Almoatzbellah Elshahawi, Cairo University
Corrosion Inhibition of Bronze Alloy by Jatropha Extract in Neutral Media for Application on Archaeological Bronze Artifacts
4:00-4:30 Coffee Break
4:30-5:30 Keynote Address
Gretchen R. Dabbs, Southern Illinois University
The importance of time, space, and reflexivity in Egyptology: Examining the evidence for an epidemic disease at Akhetaten
5:30 Reception