Anatolian Futures: Archaeologies of Anatolia within the Larger Mediterranean
Friends of 17³Ô¹Ïpresent the next webinar of the 2025-2026 season on March 11, 2026, at 7:00 pm EDT, presented by Müge Durusu-Tanrıöver. This webinar will be free and open to the public. Registration through Zoom (with a valid email address) is required. This webinar will be recorded and all registrants will be sent a recording link in the days following the webinar.
In this talk, Dr. Durusu-Tanrıöver traces the lineage of this fragmentation across times, places, and people as varied as nineteenth-century European travelers to Anatolia, early Republican Ankara, continual coloniality, and Orientalism. Posing the questions of how we can define Anatolia and what its archaeologies can look like in the later twenty-first century CE, she makes the case for a connected Anatolian archaeology that can both claim its multiple constituents and contribute to the larger debates in Mediterranean archaeology. To this end, she will identify several directions including, but not limited to, deliberate theoretical engagement, multi-disciplinarity, and regional fieldwork looking beyond single sites.
Dr. Müge Durusu-Tanrıöver is an archaeologist whose research explores the strategies and impacts of ancient imperialism on border regions in the eastern Mediterranean during the Bronze and Iron Ages. Her publications and fieldwork to date have mainly focused on the Hittite Empire, approaching this state from its edges through a myriad of lenses, including material culture and hybridity, artistic production, the rhetoric of kingship, and place-making. She holds a PhD in Archaeology and the Ancient World from Brown University and is currently an Assistant Professor in Temple University’s Department of Art History. Since 2019, Dr. Durusu-Tanrıöver has directed the Polatlı Landscape Archaeology and Survey Project (PLAS), a fieldwork initiative that seeks to understand the imperial strategies of the Hittite Empire along its western border, as well as the responses of local communities to the expansion of Hittite power in the region. Dr. Durusu-Tanrıöver has received numerous grants for her research, including a Charles Harris Project Grant from 17³Ô¹Ïin 2023.
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