90 episodes

History isn’t repeating itself; history is now

ancientnow.substack.com

Afterlives of Ancient Egypt with Kara Cooney Kara Cooney

    • History
    • 4.8 • 122 Ratings

History isn’t repeating itself; history is now

ancientnow.substack.com

    April 2024 Listener Q&A

    April 2024 Listener Q&A

    In this episode Kara and Jordan answer listener questions from April. To submit a question for the monthly Q&A podcast, become a paid subscriber on Substack or join our Patreon!
    A few photos from Kara’s Egypt trip
    Show Notes:
    Female Genitalia Lexicography
    * Bednarski, Andrew 2000. Hysteria revisited. Women's public health in ancient Egypt. In McDonald, Angela and Christina Riggs (eds), Current research in Egyptology 2000, 11-17. Oxford: Archaeopress.
    * Ghalioungui, P. 1977. The persistence and spread of some obstetric concepts held in ancient Egypt. Annales du Service des Antiquités de l'Égypte 62, 141-154.
    * Westendorf, Wolfhart 1999. Handbuch der altägyptischen Medizin, 2 vols. Handbuch der Orientalistik, erste Abteilung 36 (1-2). Leiden: Brill.
    Burial of Children
    * Barba, Pablo 2021. Power, personhood and changing emotional engagement with children's burial during the Egyptian Predynastic. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 31 (2), 211-228. DOI: 10.1017/S0959774320000402.  
    * Kaiser, Jessica 2023. When death comes, he steals the infant: child burials at the Wall of the Crow cemetery, Giza. In Kiser-Go, Deanna and Carol A. Redmount (eds), Weseretkau "mighty of kas": papers in memory of Cathleen A. Keller, 347-369. Columbus, GA: Lockwood Press. DOI: 10.5913/2023853.22.  Export >>
    * Marshall, Amandine 2022. Childhood in ancient Egypt. Translated by Colin Clement. Cairo; New York: American University in Cairo Press. 
    * Saleem, Sahar N., Sabah Abd el-Razek Seddik, and Mahmoud el Halwagy 2020. A child mummy in a pot: computed tomography study and insights on child burials in ancient Egypt. In Kamrin, Janice, Miroslav Bárta, Salima Ikram, Mark Lehner, and Mohamed Megahed (eds), Guardian of ancient Egypt: studies in honor of Zahi Hawass 3, 1393-1403. Prague: Charles University, Faculty of Arts.
    Skin Color and Gender
    * Shelley Halley, Prof. Emerita of Classics and Africana Studies, Hamilton College
    * Tutankhamun out of the lotus blossom with ‘naturalistic’ skin
    * Roth, Ann Macy 2000. Father earth, mother sky: ancient Egyptian beliefs about conception and fertility. In Rautman, Alison E. (ed.), Reading the body: representations and remains in the archaeological record, 187-201. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
    * Tan Men/Pale Women: Color and Gender in Archaic Greece and Egypt, a Comparative Approach by Mary Ann Eaverly
    Kara’s ARCE Talk- “Elites Relying on Cultural Memory for Regime Building”
    Abstract: Theban elites of the late 20th and 21st Dynasties relied on veneration of 17th and 18th Dynasty kings to support their regimes ideologically. The cults of Ahmose-Nefertari and Amenhotep I were vibrant in the west Theban region, and their oracles were essential to solving many disputes. Herihor connected his militarily-achieved kingship to his position in the Karnak priesthood using the ancestor kings as touchstones. Twenty-first Dynasty Theban elites named their children after 18th Dynasty monarchs; Theban High Priest and king Panedjem named a daughter Maatkare, ostensibly after Hatshepsut of the 18th Dynasty, and a son Menkheperre after Thutmose III. Examination of the 20th and 21st Dynasty interventions of the royal mummies from Dra Abu el Naga and the Valley of the Kings indicates these royal corpses were used as sacred effigies of a sort, rewrapped and placed into regilded containers even after they had been stripped of their treasures and golden embellishments. This paper will examine how immigrants and mercenaries were able to move into Theban elite circles by marshaling ancestral connections to power. Men like Herihor and Panedjem, one of them at least of Meshwesh origins, worked within an Upper Egyptian cultural system that put its temple communities of practice before its military and veiled its politics with pious rituals and oracular pronouncements. Such elites had to negotiate their identities and power grabs through the cultural memory of the region’s royal ancestors.
    * Episode 83-

    • 56 min
    Making Antiquity TV, Part 2 (with Neil Laird)

    Making Antiquity TV, Part 2 (with Neil Laird)

    In Part 2 of a two-part episode, Kara and multiple Emmy-nominated Executive Producer and novelist Neil Laird continue their conversation about their experiences making television documentaries about the ancient world, how things get done behind the scenes, whether or not romanticizing the past is a bad thing, and what the future may hold for documentary programs.
    About Neil Laird
    Neil Laird is a multiple Emmy and BAFTA-nominated creator and Executive Producer on long-running series such as Brain Games, Mysteries of the Abandoned, Border Wars, Through the Wormhole With Morgan Freeman, What on Earth?, How It's Made, Secrets of the Underground, Expedition Unknown With Josh Gates and Survivorman.
    Neil has worked extensively on both the network and production side of non-fiction TV since 1996. He has developed, overseen, and produced over 1,000 hours of non-fiction programs and specials in nearly every genre, with a particular passion, expertise, and professional contacts in history, mystery, science, and adventure.
    Neil’s novels Prime Time Travelers and Prime Time Pompeii are slated for release in 2024.


    Get full access to Ancient/Now at ancientnow.substack.com/subscribe

    • 1 hr 15 min
    Making Antiquity TV (with Neil Laird)

    Making Antiquity TV (with Neil Laird)

    In Part 1 of a two-part episode, Kara and multiple Emmy-nominated Executive Producer and novelist Neil Laird talk about their experiences making television documentaries about the ancient world, how things get done behind the scenes, and what the future may hold for documentary programs.
    Secrets of Egypt's Lost Queen
    Out of Egypt
    Digging for the Truth
    About Neil Laird
    Neil Laird is a multiple Emmy and BAFTA-nominated creator and Executive Producer on long-running series such as Brain Games, Mysteries of the Abandoned, Border Wars, Through the Wormhole With Morgan Freeman, What on Earth?, How It's Made, Secrets of the Underground, Expedition Unknown With Josh Gates and Survivorman.
    Neil has worked extensively on both the network and production side of non-fiction TV since 1996. He has developed, overseen, and produced over 1,000 hours of non-fiction programs and specials in nearly every genre, with a particular passion, expertise, and professional contacts in history, mystery, science, and adventure.
    Neil’s novels Prime Time Travelers and Prime Time Pompeii are slated for release in 2024.


    Get full access to Ancient/Now at ancientnow.substack.com/subscribe

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Color in Ancient Art

    Color in Ancient Art

    This week Kara and Amber discuss color (also known as polychromy) in ancient Mediterranean art and how it is studied and understood today. What role did color play in ancient art? How does polychromy affect the way modern audiences view ancient art? What are the origins of the aesthetic preference for plain white marble sculpture in Western art?
    The Color of Life exhibition (Getty Villa)
    Kelsey Museum (University of Michigan) resources on color in ancient art
    Bibliography for color in ancient art
    The Metropolitan Museum of Art resources on color in ancient art
    Seated statue of Hatshepsut (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
    Statue of Leda and the Swan (Getty Villa)
    Curator and artist jill moniz



    Get full access to Ancient/Now at ancientnow.substack.com/subscribe

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Thutmose III and the Veneration of Royal Ancestors

    Thutmose III and the Veneration of Royal Ancestors

    In this episode Kara and Amber talk about the veneration of ancestor kings in the late 20th-21st Dynasties. During this period the coffins of ancestor kings were manipulated, buried, and reburied in caches like that of Theban Tomb 320 (also known as Deir el Bahri 320). Who was reburying and caching these royal ancestors together and why? Using the coffin of Thutmose III as a case study, they discuss the interplay of the religious, political, and economic factors behind these royal caches.
    Kara’s forthcoming book, Recycling for Death: Coffin Reuse and the Theban Royal Caches
    More about Theban Tomb 320
    Amber’s post on presidential homes and America’s historical landscape


    Get full access to Ancient/Now at ancientnow.substack.com/subscribe

    • 1 hr 15 min
    The Death of Cleopatra: Murder or Suicide?

    The Death of Cleopatra: Murder or Suicide?

    CW// self harm and suicide
    In this episode Kara and Amber discuss the death of Cleopatra VII and whether or not we should trust the ancient Roman accounts regarding the circumstances of her death. Did she really commit suicide, as Roman historians tell us? Or were the accounts of her death by suicide part of a cunning Roman propaganda campaign?
    Read more about the death of Cleopatra and the ancient sources on it here and here.
    Listen to our other episodes on Cleopatra:
    Episode 57 | Reception, Ownership, and Race: Netflix’s ”Queen Cleopatra”
    Episode 60 | Part II: Reception, Ownership, and Race: Netflix’s ”Queen Cleopatra”


    Get full access to Ancient/Now at ancientnow.substack.com/subscribe

    • 1 hr 5 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
122 Ratings

122 Ratings

Radnor91 ,

Conversations and connections

I look forward to each episode and take away food for thought and further research. There is always joy in the serendipitous flow of ideas in the podcasts that leads to other topics. I appreciate the close looking at objects and commitment to concentrate beyond established narratives. It’s wonderful that the podcast has guests who bring expertise from many fields, including linguistics, bioarchaeology, social history, and museum work. I am excited to read Kara’s new book and am fascinated by Jordan’s work on wigs. Thank you, Amber, for the Substack, and all the references for further archival digging. I left archaeology a while ago, and you help me enjoy the best of my old career. Cheers!

Tbwat ,

Great Podcast, But…

Excellent podcast but I beg the hosts to equalize their microphone input/output volume. The difference in volume between Kara’s mic and Jordan’s mic is so dramatic and unpleasant to listen to. Otherwise the content, hosts, and guests are incredible…just adjust your mics please!!!

lupebalti ,

💙

Well, I’m obsessed! Love how the podcast explains the ancient with modern examples and the other way around. I just ordered one of her books. They are both amazing! Thank you

Top Podcasts In History

The Rest Is History
Goalhanger Podcasts
American Scandal
Wondery
American History Tellers
Wondery
Lore
Aaron Mahnke
Everything Everywhere Daily
Gary Arndt | Glassbox Media
Dan Carlin's Hardcore History
Dan Carlin

You Might Also Like

Lovett or Leave It
Crooked Media
Offline with Jon Favreau
Crooked Media
#SistersInLaw
Politicon
Why Is This Happening? The Chris Hayes Podcast
Chris Hayes, MSNBC & NBCNews THINK
Jack
MSW Media
Pod Save America
Crooked Media