Taylor Bryanne Woodcock
First Name:
Taylor Bryanne
Last Name:
Woodcock
Email :
taylorbryanne.woodcock@mail.utoronto.ca
Title:
PhD Candidate
Biography :
Taylor has worked in Egypt as an archaeologist and finds analyst with the South Asasif Conservation Project for four seasons and in Sudan with the Jebel Barkal Archaeological Project for three seasons. She co-founded Nile Scribes, an Egyptology blog, with Thomas H. Greiner in 2017.
Education
- M.A. in Egyptology from the American University in Cairo, Egypt
Current Supervisor(s)
Katja Goebs
Dissertation Title
Constructing the Self, Perceiving the Other: The Nubian in Ancient Egyptian Contexts
Publications
- “Five Ancient Egyptian Words You Didn’t Know You Knew” in Nile 26 (July-August 2020), co-authored with Thomas H. Greiner
- “Battle against Sea People,” “Battle of Kadesh,” “Battle of Megiddo,” “Ethnicity,” “Foreigners,” “Kush,” “Nubia,” “Punt,” in All Things Ancient Egypt: An Encyclopedia of the Ancient Egyptian World, 2 vols, (2019) edited by Lisa K. Sabbahy
Presentations
- “Karakhamun’s Ceiling Project” presented for the Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities, Toronto, April 29, 2021
- “Islands and Identities: The Sea Peoples in Egyptian Sources” presented for the Canadian Institute for Mediterranean Studies, Toronto, February 15, 2018
- “Good Neighbors and Bad Neighbors: The dichotomy of positive and negative portrayals of ethnic groups in ancient Egyptian texts” presented at the Graduate Annual Research Discussions on Egypt & Nubia, Cairo, December 13, 2014
Teaching Experience
- NML340 - Intermediate Middle Egyptian
Personal Website:
https://nilescribes.org/
People Type:
Research Area:
Areas of Interest:
- Ethnicity in antiquity
- Nubian archaeology
- Migration and cultural adaptation