A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean

(Steven Felgate) #1
Notes on Contributors xi

indigenous peoples, ethnicity, compara-
tive frontiers, and world-systems anal-
ysis. He is coauthor, with James V.
Fenelon, ofIndigenous Peoples and Glob-
alization: Resistance and Revitalization
(2009, Paradigm).


Aaron Johnsonworks on the Greek liter-
ature of Late Antiquity, especially that of
the third and fourth centuries. He teaches
classics and humanities at Lee University in
Cleveland, Tennessee.


Philip Kaplanis an associate professor
of history at the University of North
Florida in Jacksonville. He has published
articles on geography, on mercenary and
other communities in the Eastern Mediter-
ranean, and on contacts between Greek and
non-Greeks.


Adam M. Kemezisis an associate pro-
fessor in the Department of History and
Classics at the University of Alberta. He
is the author ofGreek Narratives of the
Roman Empire under the Severans(Cam-
bridge University Press, forthcoming) as
well as several articles on imperial Greek
literature.


Ann E. Killebrewis an associate profes-
sor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean
studies, Jewish studies, and anthropology
at the Pennsylvania State University. Her
research interests span the Bronze Age
through Early Islamic period, with a focus
on the Late Bronze and Iron Ages in
the eastern Mediterranean. In addition to
numerous publications dealing with eth-
nicity, ancient ceramic technology, and
heritage studies/public archaeology, her
recent work includes the development of
new technologies in 3D documentation of
excavation and survey fieldwork. She has
participated in or directed excavations and
surveys in Israel and Turkey. She is cur-
rently the co-director of the Tel Akko Total
Archaeology Project.


A. Bernard Knapp is Emeritus Pro-
fessor of Mediterranean archaeology,
Department of Archaeology, University
of Glasgow. Research interests include
archaeological theory, island archaeol-
ogy, gender and social identity, archae-
ologies of landscape, and the prehistory
of the Mediterranean, especially Cyprus.
He co-edits theJournal of Mediterranean
Archaeology, and is general editor of
the series Monographs in Mediterranean
Archaeology.

Kristian Kristiansenhas been professor of
archaeology at the University of Gothen-
burg in Sweden since 1994. His main
publications includeEurope before History
(Cambridge University Press 1998); with
Michael Rowlands,Social Transformations
in Archaeology: Global and Local Per-
spectives(Routledge 1998); with Thomas
Larsson, TheRiseofBronzeAgeSociety.
Travels, Transmission and Transformations
(Cambridge University Press 2005); and
with Timothy Earle, Organizing Bronze
Age Societies. The Mediterranean, Central
Europe and Scandinavia Compared(Cam-
bridge University Press 2010).

Parshia Lee-Stecum is associate profes-
sor in classics at the University of Mel-
bourne. His main research and teaching
interests include Roman poetry of the
Augustan period (especially Roman elegy),
Roman myth and ethnicity, and magic in
the Roman world. He is currently the asso-
ciate dean (teaching and learning) in the
Faculty of Arts, and is the author ofPower-
play in Tibullus: ReadingElegiesBook One
(Cambridge University Press 1998).

Kathryn Lomas is an honorary senior
research associate in archaeology at Univer-
sity College London, and part-time tutor
in Classics at the University of Durham.
She has research specialisms in the his-
tory and archaeology of early Italy and
Free download pdf