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ASOR 2022-2023 ONLINE LIBRARY
ASOR's Online Library is an exclusive resource for scholars, students, and enthusiasts who want a master portal into the world of the ancient Near East and wider Mediterranean. The platform is already open to registrants of the 2022 Annual Meeting. Explore presentations, posters, and virtual museum tours from the 2020 Virtual Annual Meeting, the virtual component of the 2021 Annual Meeting (Virtual Component), and the entire archive of Friends of ASOR’s monthly webinar series.
ASOR ANNUAL MEETING 2022
Virtual: October 19-23 | Boston: November 16-19
ASOR’s 2022 Annual Meeting will, again, have both in-person and virtual components. The virtual component will take place online from October 19-23. The in-person component will take place November 16–19 in downtown Boston at the Boston Park Plaza. Paper sessions, posters, and workshops will be a part of both components. View the list of 2022 Approved Sessions & Workshops to see what is being offered on the Academic Program, and check back often for important updates.
Registration is open and the rates include participation in both the in-person and virtual components.
Scholarships available: Due to COVID-19, and thanks to ASOR’s generous members, current ASOR members with a need may request a 25%, 50%, or full scholarship for annual meeting registration. E-mail programs@asor.org with requests and a brief explanation. We will strive to meet all requests from members, with a preference towards those who have not received a scholarship in the past two years. We will do our best to meet requests from non-members and past scholarship recipients.
2022 Conference Information
- 2022 List of Approved Sessions & Workshops
- 2022 Plenary Address
- 2022 Call for Papers
- 2022 Call for Posters
- Hotel & City Information: Boston Park Plaza
- Travel Information & Discounts
- ASOR Program Committee
- Code of Conduct for the ASOR Annual Meeting and Other ASOR Sponsored Events
Forms
- 2022 ASOR Annual Meeting Registration Form (printable PDF)
- Join ASOR or Renew Your Membership Online
- ASOR Membership Form (printable PDF)
2021 Conference Information
FOA WEBINAR SERIES ARCHIVE
Click here to view the upcoming Friends of ASOR webinars. All webinar proceeds fund scholarships for members impacted by COVID-19, as well as increasing ASOR’s online resources for our members and the public.
Individual Webinar:
ASOR Sustaining Members: $0 | ASOR Members: $6 | Public: $12
Click here for more information about sponsorships.
Season Pass (20+ webinars):
ASOR Sustaining Members: $0 | ASOR Members: $75 | Public: $150
Click here for more information about season passes.
How to register for a webinar: If you are an ASOR member, log into the online store. If you are new to ASOR, please click on the “New Visitor Registration” link to enter your email and chose a password for the online store. After logging in, navigate to “Meeting and Event Registration” to register for the webinar and pay the fee. Each paid registrant will receive a confirmation email after paying for the webinar. If you do not receive this email (and you have checked your Spam folder), please contact us because the system did not complete your registration. Please e-mail membership@asor.org with any questions or issues with registering.
You will be e-mailed a Zoom Webinar link about four days prior to each lecture. If you have not received a link by the Friday before the webinar, please contact ASOR. All webinars are recorded, and all paid registrants who cannot attend the webinar will be sent a link to download the recording.
WATCH PAST FOA WEBINARS
To view any past webinars, please either log in or register for the 2023 Annual Meeting.
FOA WEBINARS | 2022-2023 Season
Columns as Cultural Capital: The Jordanian Practice of Gifting Archaeological Objects | Elizabeth Macaulay (August 28, 2022)
The Good Kings: The Modern Obsession with Ancient Egyptian Kingship | Kara Cooney (September 15, 2022)
Life and Death along the Nile: Insights from the Bioarchaeology of Nubia Expedition | Brenda J. Baker (September 29, 2022)
Travels with Olga Tufnell: Memoirs of a “Golden Age” Archaeologist in the Levant | Jack Green (October 13, 2022)
Representations of the Bible and the Ancient Near East in Film: From Griffith to Grindhouse | Kevin McGeough (October 27, 2022)
Something from the Time of Jesus? Tourists, Souvenirs, and Buying the Holy Land | Morag M. Kersel (December 1, 2022)
From Paganism to Christianity to Islam: The Transformation of Ancient Caesarea | Marsha Rozenblit, Yael Arnon, & Anna Iamim (December 15, 2022)
“Earliest Inscription Found!” Exposing Sensationalism in the Field of Ancient Inscriptions | Christopher Rollston (January 12, 2023)
Antiquities Trafficking in the Age of Social Media: How Big Tech Facilitates and Profits from the Digital Black Market | Katie Paul (January 26, 2023) - Learn More
Secrets of Egypt’s Middle Kingdom Capital: el-Lisht | Sarah Parcak (February 8, 2023) - Learn More
Into the Unknown: Exploring a “Lost” Old Kingdom Tomb & Egypto-Nubian Connections | Gregory Mumford (February 23, 2023) - Learn More
How Museums are Saturating the Ancient World with Color | Pinar Durgun (March 9, 2023) - Learn More
Urartu: Reframing Assyria’s Enigmatic Neighbor | Tiffany Early-Spadoni (March 23, 2023) - Learn More
New Perspectives on Jerusalem’s 7th Century BCE Elite | Yuval Gadot (April 16, 2023) - Learn More
The Boomer Archaeologist – Tribes, Identity and the Holy Land | Thomas E. Levy (April 27, 2023) - Learn More
Jesus Reading Scripture: Exploring the Archaeology of Worship in First-Century Synagogues | Paul Flesher (May 11, 2023) - Learn More
Monuments, Monumental Architecture, and Monumentality in Ancient Israel | Kyle Keimer (May 25, 2023) - Learn More
FOA WEBINARS | 2021-2022 Season
From Standing Stones to Sacred Emptiness: Textual and Visual Portrayals of Israel’s God | Theodore Lewis (August 29, 2021)
David, Solomon, and Rehoboam’s Kingdom—The Archaeological Evidence | Yosef Garfinkel (September 19, 2021)
Digging the Divine?: Judahite Pillar Figurines & the Archaeology of Israelite Religion | Erin Darby (October 7, 2021)
Jesus and Jerusalem on TV: How Do Bible Documentaries Get Made? | Robert Cargill (October 17, 2021)
Under Jerusalem: The Buried History of the World’s Most Contested City | Andrew Lawler (November 4, 2021)
Synagogues As Jesus Knew Them | James R. Strange (December 2, 2021)
The Not-So-Innocents Abroad: The Beginnings of American Biblical Archaeology | Rachel Hallote (January 20, 2022)
Symposium—Tel Rehov: A Major Bronze and Iron Age City in the Jordan Valley | Amihai Mazar, Nava Panitz Cohen, Nota Kourou, Naama Yahalom-Mack, Robert Mullins (February 10, 2022)
Excavations at Tel Gezer: A Personal Story | Sam Wolff (February 20, 2022)
Where Are They Now?: A Preview of 2022 ASOR-Affiliated Fieldwork Projects | Stephen Batiuk, Michael Given, Michael Hoff, Monique Roddy (March 8, 2022)
Uncovering What is Nubian Beneath the Veneer of Egyptianness: Excavating the Archives | Debora Heard (March 20, 2022)
Back to the Field: Recent Discoveries & Summer Plans 2022 | Lorenzo d’Alfonso, Kathryn Grossman, & James R. Strange (April 3, 2022)
Preserving Cultural Heritage in Hisban and Umm al-Jimal, Jordan | Øystein LaBianca, Elizabeth Osinga, & Darrell Rohl (April 24, 2022)
A World at War: Protecting Cultural Heritage in Times of Conflict | Patty Gerstenblith, Lisa Ackerman, Andrew Cohen, Jane DeRose Evans (May 12, 2022)
FOA WEBINARS | 2020-2021 Season
When Women Ruled the World—An Egyptian View | Kara Cooney (May 23, 2021)
Translating Outreach into Action: Cultivating Heritage Volunteerism in Libya | Ahmad Emrage and William Raynolds (May 23, 2021)
My Life as An Archaeologist—How My Mind Has Changed, and How It Has Stayed the Same | Larry Geraty (May 23, 2021)
Jezebel and Naboth’s Vineyard—What Recent Excavations at Jezreel Reveal About the Bloody Biblical Story | Jennie Ebeling (May 23, 2021)
Identities in the Age of Internationalism: Tel Lachish in the Late Bronze Age | Felix Höflmayer (May 22, 2021)
My Life as An Archaeologist—How My Mind Has Changed, and How It Has Stayed the Same | Stuart Swiny (May 22, 2021)
Life and Death on Petra’s North Ridge | Megan A. Perry (May 22, 2021)
Black in Ancient History: Disciplinary Divides and a Call for Change | Debora Heard (May 22, 2021)
7 Years After 1177—What Has Changed Since I Published My Book | Eric H. Cline (May 21, 2021)
My Life as An Archaeologist—How My Mind Has Changed, and How It Has Stayed the Same | Carol Meyers (May 21, 2021)
Pious Textual Forgeries: From Shapira to the Museum of the Bible | Christopher Rollston, Katherine Jones, and Thomas Kline (May 21, 2021)
Archaeogaming: Why Video Games Deserve Their Own Archaeology | Tine Rassalle, Shannon Martino, Matthew Winter, Michael Zimmerman (April 18, 2021)
How the Bible Became a Book | William Schniedewind (March 21, 2021)
The Mysteries of Mithras in Caesarea: Exploring the Cult’s Rites and Remains | Jane DeRose Evans, Alexandra Ratzlaff (March 11, 2021)
Archaeology and the Hidden Religious Culture of Israelite Women | Carol Meyers (February 21, 2021)
Meet the Directors—Fundraiser to Support ASOR’s Affiliated Overseas Research Centers | Matthew J. Adams, Pearce Paul Creasman, Lindy Crewe (February 11, 2021)
Early Synagogues, Jesus, and Galilee—A Jewish Perspective | Eric Meyers (December 13, 2020)
Home Sweet Home: Ancient Israelite Households in Context | Cynthia Shafer-Elliott (October 18, 2020)
Priestesses in the Days of Solomon and Ahab | Susan Ackerman (September 13, 2020)
Digging Deeper: How Archaeology Works | Eric H. Cline (August 9, 2020)
ASOR VIRTUAL ANNUAL MEETING 2020 RECAP
2021 Annual Meeting registrants have access to all of the posters and presentation recordings via the Schedule page
During a time when travel has been restricted and many cultural and social attractions are closed, ASOR attendees were treated to two virtual museum tours, “Treasures of Ancient Egypt: Sunken Cities,” at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and “The Dura-Europas and Gerasa Collections” at the Yale University Art Gallery.
ASOR’s 2020 Virtual Annual Meeting was a great success! Thank you to everyone who participated from around the world. There were 1,085 registrants from 39 countries and 6 continents!
More than 430 presenters shared their work in over 80 sessions and workshops on the 2020 Virtual Program. Paper presentation recordings, poster PDF files, and recordings of sessions and workshops will continue to be available to registered attendees through June of 2021. If you missed the meeting, there is still time to gain access to the digital academic content from ASOR’s Virtual Annual Meeting when you buy access to ASOR’s Online Library.
While we would have liked to see everyone in Boston, it was a privilege to provide a platform for our global membership to connect, share, and engage on subjects from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean. ASOR is committed to growing and developing our digital offerings, not only during the pandemic, but as a continuing resource for members. As part of this commitment, and with consent from presenters, we will be sharing some content from ASOR’s Virtual Annual Meeting on our public-facing site, ASORtv. Currently you can listen to ASOR’s Executive Director, Andrew Vaughn, give the welcome remarks for our first-ever virtual meeting and watch Monica Hanna’s thought-provoking plenary address, “Does the Future of the Past Lie in the Hands of the Living?”
The virtual format offered enhanced options for an inclusive and more accessible meeting, not only in terms of global attendee participation, but also in terms of the academic program. ASOR’s Program Committee (PC) had the herculean task of reworking our program, designed for an in-person meeting, into one that would best reach scholars and enthusiasts at their homes, offices, or wherever they were connecting from during the pandemic.
Helen Dixon and Allison Thomason, co-chairs of the Program Committee, would like to thank the dedicated members of the PC for their wise counsel and constructive engagement this year – overcoming the disruption of our usual meeting timeline, the learning curve that comes with new partners and platforms, time zone and other scheduling challenges, as well as worries over our members’ workloads and semesters-from-home. We also want to thank all of the 2020 Session and Workshop Chairs for their flexibility and willingness to adapt to the new format. Thanks to the PC and these Chairs, we were able to put together a strong and diverse program, adding several sessions on cultural heritage, including the plenary by Monica Hanna, and new member-organized sessions and workshops, such as Online Photo Archives as Tools for Archaeological Heritage Preservation and Engagement. We also welcomed scholars and heritage professionals from Libya to the ASOR Annual Meeting program, including a presentation on the Museums in a Suitcase Program. We are happy to report that the virtual format enabled many people to participate who might not normally have the chance: nearly 40% of presenters were from outside of the USA, and 35% attended from outside of North America. Thanks again to all attendees, presenters, and chairs, as well as the tremendous work of the ASOR staff for making our first all-virtual Annual Meeting a success!
“Everything was so clear, the website software worked beautifully, and we had all the support we needed–you’ve blown all the other professional societies out of the water. It was so nice to be able to connect with colleagues and carry on with the meeting–honestly, it felt like a little slice of normalcy and was a bright spot for me in this challenging fall.” – Jessie DeGrado
“In this time of pandemic, when I start to feel isolated, this ASOR meeting was a breath of fresh air!” – Laura Battini
“This was one of the best virtual meetings I have attended this year! The format worked very well. I’m looking forward to watching many of the presentations over the holidays when I’ll have more time.” – Anonymous
“I wish all conferences would have a virtual component. It is also wonderful to be able to view to sessions in my own time as I can see so many more than I would be able to see in person.” – Anonymous