This page was created by Emilia Porubcin.  The last update was by Christina J. Hodge.

Our Dark Materials: Rediscovering an Egyptian Collection

Lessons

A critical collection

As ordinary, fragmentary artifacts of modest life and death, the items explored here produce a view of ancient Egypt distinct from that typically presented in museums. Interest in ancient Egypt has historically focused on Dynastic periods. By studying materials, rather than chronology, we include periods both before and after pharaonic Egypt. Museums usually celebrate tombs and temples filled with wonderful things. Everyday objects prompt us to consider the lives of ordinary Egyptians. Egyptological research was initially dominated by epigraphy, the study of texts. In this project, we focus on objects, including those without inscriptions. While many items included here were used in burials, they also speak to the activities of daily life, which they served in this world and the next.

This Egyptian collection reveals both research and social value through its material qualities. Despite a history of dislocation and disregard, these materials matter.

Acknowledgements

Digital publication (2019)

Student curators (2018)

Campus supporters

Other consultants

Instructional curator

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