Jump to content

David Wengrow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Caryatis (talk | contribs) at 18:19, 2 January 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

  • Comment: Please add some references in. Jovanmilic97 (talk) 10:27, 30 December 2019 (UTC)

David Wengrow, (born 25 July 1972) is Professor of Comparative Archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.[1]

Education

Wengrow enrolled at the University of Oxford in 1993, obtaining a BA in Archaeology & Anthropology. He went on to qualify for an MSt in World Archaeology in 1998 and then studied for a DPhil under the supervision of Roger Moorey completed in 2001.[2] Andrew Sherratt was a notable influence during Wengrow's time at Oxford.[3]

Academic career

Between 2001-2004 Wengrow was Henri Frankfort Fellow at the Warburg Institute and Junior Research Fellow at Christ Church, Oxford; he was appointed to a lectureship at the UCL Institute of Archaeology in 2004, and in 2011 was made Professor of Comparative Archaeology (a title formerly held by Peter Ucko).[4] Wengrow has conducted archaeological excavations in Africa and the Middle East, most recently with the Sulaymaniyah Museum in Iraqi Kurdistan[5] and is currently working on a historical study of social inequality with LSE anthropologist David Graeber.[6]

Honours

Wengrow is a recipient of the Antiquity Prize[7] and has delivered the Rostovtzeff Lectures (New York University),[8] the Jack Goody Lectures (Max Planck Institute)[9] and the Biennial Henry Myers Lecture (Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain).[10] He served as external coordinator of the Mellon Research Initiative at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts[11] and was Distinguished Visitor at the University of Auckland.[12]

Selected publications

Books

Wengrow, D. (2006). The Archaeology of Early Egypt. Social Transformations in North-East Africa, 10,000-2650 BC. Cambridge World Archaeology Series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.[1]

Wengrow, D. (2010). What Makes Civilization? The Ancient Near East and the Future of the West. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press.[2]

Wengrow, D. (2014). The Origins of Monsters. Image and Cognition in the First Age of Mechanical Reproduction. Princeton: Princeton University Press [3]

Short essays

Wengrow, D. (2018) ‘A history of true civilisation is not one of monuments’. Aeon. [4]

Graeber, D. and D. Wengrow (2018). ‘How to change the course of human history (at least the part that’s already happened)’. Eurozine. [5]

Wengrow, D. (2019) ‘Rethinking cities from the ground up’. The British Academy [6]

https://ucl.academia.edu/DavidWengrow

References