Academic literature on the topic 'Women Egyptologists'

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Journal articles on the topic "Women Egyptologists"

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Аброськина, Е. В. "“I did not create illusions for the future”: the professional way of a woman scientist in the era of great changes (based on the memoirs of N.D. Flittner)." Диалог со временем, no. 78(78) (April 24, 2022): 373–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.21267/aquilo.2022.78.78.024.

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В статье представлен анализ воспоминаний петербургского историка и искусствоведа Н.Д. Флиттнер (1879–1957), сотрудницы Эрмитажа (1918–1950), автора ряда классических исследований по искусству Древнего Востока, преподавателя ЛГУ (1921–1935) и Института живописи, скульптуры и архитектуры им. И. Е. Репина (1937–1956). Данный текст сфокусирован преимущественно на этапе ее профессионального становления: так, Флиттнер пишет про обучение на Высших женских (Бестужевских) курсах и в Санкт-Петербургском университете (1899–1903), описывает период музейной и научной работы в Эрмитаже (1918–1950), показыва
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Christiansen, Thomas. "Ingeniøren og de ægyptiske mumier: En kioskbasker fra 1910’erne." Fund og Forskning i Det Kongelige Biblioteks Samlinger 61 (January 13, 2023): 47–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/fof.v61i.135602.

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Thomas Christiansen: The Engineer and the Egyptian Mummies: A Scoop from the 1910s
 The article contains a wealth of new and valuable information on important ancient Egyptian objects that are today housed and on display in the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen and the Museum of Ancient Art (Antikmuseet) in Aarhus. Using Mediestream – a service provided by the Royal Library that allows you to access and search more than 35 million digitised Danish newspaper pages – it tells the curious story of a Danish engineer, Jacob Kjeldsen (1873‑1914), and three ancient Egyptian mummiesand coffins
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Books on the topic "Women Egyptologists"

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University of Wales Swansea. Egypt Centre, ed. Reflections of women in Ancient Egypt: Women, museums and Egyptologists. Egypt Centre, 2000.

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Laurence, Naville, and Eggly-Naville Corinne, eds. La plume, le pinceau, la prière: L'égyptologue Marguerite Naville (1852-1930) : récit biographique à trois voix. Baconnière, 2014.

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Desroches-Noblecourt, Christiane. La Grande Nubiade, ou, Le parcours d'une égyptologue. Stock/Pernoud, 1992.

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Scarborough, Elizabeth Ann. Channeling Cleopatra. Ace Books, 2002.

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Peters, Elizabeth. Lord of the silent. Robinson, 2001.

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Elizabeth, Peters. Lord of the silent: A novel of suspense. Avon Books, 2002.

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Elizabeth, Peters. Lord of the silent. William Morrow, 2001.

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Elizabeth, Peters. Tomb of the golden bird. HarperLargePrint, 2006.

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Desroches-Noblecourt, Christiane. La Grande Nubiade, ou, Le parcours d'une égyptologue. Stock/Pernoud, 1992.

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Elizabeth, Peters. Tomb of the golden bird. Harper, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Women Egyptologists"

1

Díaz-Andreu, Margarita, and Rachel Pope. "The History of Gender Archaeology." In The Oxford Handbook of the History of Archaeology. Oxford University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190092504.013.37.

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Abstract In this chapter, the history of gender archaeology is traced, focusing primarily on Western academia. A clear link is demonstrated with waves of feminist action. We begin with the antecedents, the first studies on women undertaken amid first-wave feminism by nineteenth-century women travelers and Egyptologists, alongside considerations of the changing social role of prehistoric women in Victorian evolutionary perspectives, until these were superseded by culture-historical perspectives in the 1920s. In the second period, we recognize the impact of 1960s–1970s social movements that deve
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Reid, Donald Malcolm. "Representing Ancient Egypt at Imperial High Noon (1882–1922)." In From Plunder to Preservation. British Academy, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265413.003.0009.

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During the height of Western imperialism in Egypt from 1882 to 1922, the British ran the country and the French directed the Antiquities Service. Two contemporary artistic allegories expressed Western appropriation of the pharaonic heritage: the façade of Cairo's Egyptian Museum (1902) and Edwin Blashfield's painting Evolution of civilization in the dome of the Library of Congress (1896). The façade presents modern Egyptology as an exclusively European achievement, and Evolution presents ‘Western civilization’ as beginning in ancient Egypt and climaxing in contemporary America. The illustrated
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Swain, Hedley. "Museum Practice and the Display of Human Remains." In Archaeologists and the Dead. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198753537.003.0016.

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Visitors to the Lawrence Room, Girton College, Cambridge University, on Thursday afternoons (when the small one room museum is open to the public) will find a dead body on display. The body is that of an Egyptian mummy from the Coptic period with a painted face mask and inscription ‘Hermione Grammatike’. It was this inscription that attracted Girton College to acquire this ancient body. A loose translation suggests this was a woman scholar, and therefore the first recorded woman scholar in history and as such an appropriate ‘mascot’ for one of the early great champions for formal female educat
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