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Talk: Whose Egyptian Mummified Remains? Centering Egyptian communities in discussions surrounding ancient Egyptian human remains

  • Event Date: Friday, March 4, 2022
  • Time: 2:00 pm (CST)
  • Location: Online via Zoom
  • Cost: Free

Short presentation followed by conversation with UIUC colleagues and the audience.

Heba Abd el Gawad (UCL) in conversation with Jenny Davis (American Indian Studies and Anthropology) and the curator, Professor Clara Bosak-Schroeder, Department of the Classics

Live captioning will be provided for all events. Please contact for further accessibility needs.

Event Series Flyer (PDF)

Zoom Details

Join via Zoom

Zoom ID 832 1133 6002 / Password 845769

About the Exhibit

Bodies in Crisis draws from our extensive collection of Ancient Mediterranean artifacts and modern reproductions. This new, temporary exhibit explores how ancient cultures navigated bodily crises through art. By representing the human body at important moments of change, ancient peoples investigated, remembered, mourned, celebrated, and protected themselves from harm.

“Crisis” is an ancient Greek word meaning decision or judgement. It is a turning point, a knife’s edge, a moment in time in which many possibilities exist simultaneously. The word has negative connotations in English, but the threat of crisis is subjective. Not all the ancient peoples represented in the exhibit would have experienced their embodiment as a crisis. Instead, their bodies often pose a crisis for others—how to respond to the body and how to interpret it.

Our bodies are always changing: from birth to death, through illness, disability, and pregnancy. Ancient peoples responded to these changes in their own ways and made objects that communicate their varied perspectives. Thus, the exhibit includes burial objects from Ancient Egypt, the Niger Valley, and Eastern Europe; figurines depicting human disability, such as a dwarf and a man with a curved spine from Ancient Egypt; as well as images of hybrid creatures (part human and part animal) from Ancient Greece and the Middle East.

Please note that this program does NOT take place at the Spurlock Museum.
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Contact

For further information on this event, contact Beth Watkins at or (217) 265-5485

All participants are welcome. To request disability-related accommodations for this event, please contact Brian Cudiamat at or (217) 244-5586.