Rogers CV, December 2020
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
DYLAN KELBY ROGERS University of Virginia, Department of Art [email protected] P.O. Box 400130 dylankrogers.net Charlottesville, VA 22904 +1 757-354-7012 (mobile) EDUCATION University of Virginia, PhD, 2015, Art & Architectural History, Program in Classical Art and Archaeology, Department of Art Dissertation: Water-Display and Meaning in the High Roman Empire Committee: John Dobbins and Tyler Jo Smith (co-directors), Lisa Reilly, J.E. Lendon American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2013-2015 Regular & Student Associate Member. Gorham Philips Stevens Fellow (2014-2015) University of Virginia, MA, 2010, Art & Architectural History, Program in Classical Art and Archaeology, Department of Art MA Thesis: The Pleasure of Water: The Nymphaea of Pompeii Tulane University, BA, 2008, Magna cum Laude, with Honors in Classical Studies Majors: Classical Studies, Italian, Greek; Minors: Art History, Latin Senior Honors Thesis: The Roman Lares: Public & Private Cult Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome, Fall 2005 School Year Abroad, Viterbo, Italy, 2002-2003 POSITIONS HELD Lecturer in Roman Art and Archaeology, Department of Art, University of Virginia (2019- present) Assistant Director, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Greece (2015-2019) RESEARCH Books Water Culture in Roman Society. Research Perspectives in Ancient History 1.1. Brill. (2018) doi:10.1163/25425374-12340001 What’s New in Roman Greece? Recent Work on the Greek Mainland and the Islands in the Roman Period, Proceedings from the International Conference, 8-10 October 2015. ΜΕΛΕΤΗΜΑΤΑ 80. National Hellenic Research Foundation, Athens. (Co-edited with F. Camia, V. Di Napoli, V. Evangelidis, D. Grigoropoulos, S. Vlizos) (2018) The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens. (Co-edited with J. Neils) (Print date: January 2021) A Quaint & Curious Volume: Essays in Honor of John J. Dobbins. Archaeopress. (Co-edited with C.J. Weiss) (To be submitted in December 2020) In progress: Sensing Water: Public Water-Displays of the Roman Empire. Cambridge University Press. (Proposal accepted, May 2018) 1 Articles (peer reviewed) “Sensing Water in Roman Greece: Two Case-Studies at Herodes Atticus’ Villa at Eva-Loukou and the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore at Eleusis.” American Journal of Archaeology (Accepted, to be published January 2021) “Fountains, Experience, and Meaning in Late Antique Corinth.” Antiquité tardive, Special Issue “L’eau dans la ville tardo-antique” (Accepted, to be published December 2020) “The Hanging Garlands of Pompeii: Mimetic Acts of Ancient Lived Religion.” Arts, Special Issue: “Ancient Mediterranean Painting, Vol. 2,” 9.65 (2020). doi:10.3390/arts9020065 “Past and Present Lives of the Mosaics of Corinth.” MOSAIC. 43 (2016): 5-13. “Il piacere d’acqua: I ninfei di Pompei.” In Atti dei Seminari di Antichità Classica e del Vicino Oriente Antico “Ricerche a Confronto,” edited by V. Gheller, 2013, pp. 154-160. Edizioni Saecula. In progress: “Exposing the Roman Fountains of Egypt: A Case-Study at Dendera.” Journal of Egyptian Interconnections (submitted, under review) “The Lion King and his Snakes: Roger II and his Twelfth-Century Opus Sectile Pavements at Cappella Palatina, Palermo.” (To be submitted to the Antiquaries Journal) “The ‘Hypereia Krini’ at Ancient Pherai.” (To be submitted to Journal of Greek Archaeology) Book Chapters “Taking the Plunge: A Twenty-First-Century Look at Roman Bathing Culture.” In People and Institutions in the Roman Empire: Essays in Memory of Garrett G. Fagan, edited by L.L. Brice, A. Gatzke, M. Trundle, 2020, 125-159. Brill. (Peer reviewed) doi:10.1163/9789004441378_010 “Aquatic Pasts & the Watery Present: Water and Memory in the Fora of Rome.” In The Power of Urban Water, edited by N. Chiarenza, A. Haug, U. Müller, 2020, 105-121. DeGruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110677065-007. “Shifting Tides: Approaches to the Public Water-Displays of Roman Greece.” In Great Waterworks of Roman Greece: Aqueducts and Monumental Fountains, edited by G.A. Aristodemou and T.P. Tassios, 2018, 173-192. Archaeopress. In progress: “Sensorial Responses to Fountains in the Roman City.” In Water and Roman Cities and Settlements, edited by P. Zanovello, I. Riera, and E. Tamburrino. (In press) “Epilogue: The Social Side of Greek Water Collection.” In Going Against the Flow: Wells, Cisterns, and Water in Ancient Greece, edited by P. Klingborg, Swedish Institute at Athens. (In press) “Roman Athens.” In The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens, edited by J. Neils and D.K. Rogers, Cambridge University Press. (In press, to be published in January 2021) “Sulla and the Siege of Athens: Reconsidering Crisis, Survival, and Recovery in the First Century B.C.” In The Destruction of Cities in the Ancient Greek World, edited by E.M. Harris and S. Fachard. Cambridge University Press. (In press) 2 “Sensorial Experience and Ritual: The Lived Ancient Religion of Water in the Roman World.” In Archaeology of Ritual in the Ancient Mediterranean: Recent Finds & Innovative Approaches, edited by E. Angliker and M.A. Fowler. Kernos Supplement. (In press) Co-Authored Chapters “Roman Greece and the ‘Mnemonic Turn’. Some Critical Remarks.” (with F. Camia, V. Di Napoli, V. Evangelidis, D. Grigoropoulos, S. Vlizos) In Strategies of Remembering in Greece Under Rome (100 BC-100 AD), edited by T.M. Dijkstra et al., 2017, 21-35. Sidestone Press. “The Mosaics of the House of the Boat of Psyches: Reexamining Identity in Antioch.” (with E.M. Molacek) In A Quaint & Curious Volume: Essays in Honor of John J. Dobbins, edited by D.K. Rogers and C.J. Weiss. Archaeopress. (To be submitted December 2020) Invited Book Reviews “Reconsidering Water in Greece.” Review of: Cura Aquarum in Greece, edited by K. Wellbrock. Journal of Roman Archaeology 32.2: 843-847. (2019) “Water in Asia Minor and Beyond.” Review of: De Aquaeductu atque Aqua Urbium Lyciae Pamphyliae Pisidiae: The Legacy of Sextus Julius Frontinus, edited by G. Wiplinger. Journal of Roman Archaeology 31.2: 927-932. (2018) The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Art and Architecture, edited by C. Marconi. Religious Studies Review 43.4: 341-342. (2017) doi:10.1111/rsr.13198. Archeologia dell’acqua a Gortina di Creta in età protobizantina, by E. Giorgi. Annuario della Scuola Archeologica di Atene (submitted, to be published Fall 2020) Book Reviews Atene e il sacco di Silla: Evidenze archeologiche e topografiche fra l’86 e il 27 a.C., by C. Parigi. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2020.10.13. The Atlas of Ancient Rome, edited by A. Carandini. Religious Studies Review 44.4 (2018): 466. Roman Crete: New Perspectives, edited by J.E. Francis and A. Kouremenos. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2016.12.35. A Companion to the Archaeology of Religion in the Ancient World, edited by R. Raja and J. Rüpke. Religious Studies Review 42.4 (2016): 282. The Architecture of the Ancient Greek Theatre, edited by R. Federiksen, E.R. Gebhard, and A. Sokolicek. Classical Journal Online. 2016.10.10. The Archaeology of Sanitation in Roman Italy: Toilets, Sewers, and Water Systems, by A. Koloski- Ostrow. Classical Journal Online 2016.03.01. Columbaria Tombs and Collective Identity in Augustan Rome, by D. Borbonus. Religious Studies Review 41.3: 111. (2015) Pompeii in the Public Imagination from its Rediscovery to Today, edited by S. Hales and J. Paul. Religious Studies Review 38.3: 162-63. (2012) Gardens of the Roman Empire, edited by W.F. Jashemski et al. Religious Studies Review (In press). Rethinking the Concept of ‘Healing Settlements’: Water, Cults, Constructions and Contexts in the Ancient World, edited by M. Bassani et al. Religious Studies Review (In press) 3 Greek and Roman Technology: A Sourcebook of Translated Greek and Roman Texts, edited by A.N. Sherwood et al. Classical Journal (In press) Public Outreach “Life Aquatic with Dylan Rogers: Monumental Water Displays in the City of Victory,” podcast, Peopling the Past. (September 2020) “Art For Life: The Hanging Garlands of Pompeii according to Dylan Rogers,” podcast, Garland Magazine (Australia). (July 2020) “The Lawn & Roman Architecture,” Two-part blog post, Thoughts from the Lawn, Lifetime Learning Programs, University of Virginia Alumni Association. (March 2020) PAPERS DELIVERED Invited Papers “Water and Sensory Experience: Reconstructing the Procession of the Eleusinian Mysteries of Roman Greece.” Archaeology Brown Bag Series, University of Virginia. (10/2/20) “Water and Sensory Experience: Reconstructing the Procession of the Eleusinian Mysteries.” Archaeological Institute of America Lecture, Classical Studies Department, University of Richmond. (2/13/20) “Water and Sensory Experience: Reconstructing the Procession of the Eleusinian Mysteries.” Archaeological Institute of America Lecture, Classical Studies Department, College of William & Mary. (11/7/19) “Reexamining the Sullan Siege of Athens.” Classics Department Tuesday Luncheon Series, University of Virginia. (10/1/19) “Athens and Sulla: Revisiting the Extent of the ‘Siege’ of 86 BCE,” “Destruction, Survival, and Recovery in Ancient Greece” Conference, American School of Classical Studies at Athens. (5/18/19) “Dobbins at the American School in Athens & the Sanctuary of Artemis Brauronia,” “Dobbinalia: A Symposium in Honor of John J. Dobbins,” University of Virginia. (4/26/19) “Haec utilitas, haec amoenitas: The Role of Fountains and Springs in Greco-Roman Antiquity,” “Going Against the Flow: Wells, Cisterns, and Water in Ancient Greece” Workshop, Swedish Institute at Athens. (9/29/17) “The ‘Hypereia Krini’ at Ancient Pherai,” American School of Classical Studies at Athens. (3/30/17) “The Architectural Structure of the Baths of Caracalla” and “Hadrian’s Villa: The Role and Gestalt of Water in an Imperial Villa,” “Wasser-formen: Geschichte, Gestalt und Semantik eines Elements,” Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, Studienkurs. (10/10/16) “Το Έργο του Στεφάνου Μίλλερ: Η Νεμέα και Πέρα.” Presentation of Φιλέλλην: Essays Presented to Stephen G. Miller, New Nemea, Greece. (6/12/16) “Strepitu visuque iucunda: A Sensorial Approach to Water-Displays in Roman Greece.” Roman Seminar, Athens. (11/10/15) 4 “Nullus enim fons non sacer: Religious Water-Displays in the Roman World.” Roman Discussion Forum, Oxford University.