Ethnicity and Ethnic Constructs
in the Long History of the Ancient Mediterranean and Black Sea

organized by Maia Kotrosits & Altay Coskun
University of Waterloo, ON
26-27/4/2023

Penthesilea and Achilles. Relief from the Sebasteion of Aphrodisias.

 

Rather than a static or natural form of belonging, ethnicity is an ongoing site of social production and negotiation. It can be both the source and the product of identity. Our workshop will explore how ancient societies defined, constructed, and leveraged ethnic belonging. How did (or does) ethnicity work alongside other social categories, political exigencies, and cultural imaginations? What is changing about our traditional historical questions, if anything, when ethnicity is foregrounded in the analysis? Case studies will range from Archaic Greek colonization over Herodotus’ representation of the Persians, representations of wise men and pirates, Hellenistic Judaism, the iconography of others in Roman Egypt, and Christian concepts of identity in the Later Roman Empire.

Program

Information on the participants

Poster

Campus Map

All are welcome.

If you wish to attend, please, register asap with acoskun at uwaterloo.ca or maiakotrosits at gmail.com.

A reader with extended abstracts will be shared in due course with registered participants.