Naoíse Mac Sweeney
Naoíse Mac Sweeney is a British archaeologist, historian, writer, and academic. Since 2020 she has been Professor of Classical Archaeology in the Institute of Classical Archaeology at the University of Vienna.[1] Early life and educationMac Sweeney was born in 1982 to Chinese and Irish parents in London.[2][3] She studied for an undergraduate degree in Classics at the University of Cambridge, followed by a Master's at UCL in Ancient History.[1] She completed a PhD at Cambridge in 2007 with a thesis titled "Community Identity in Protohistoric Western Anatolia".[4] CareerFollowing her PhD she spent time in policy research working on conflict and international development.[5] From 2008 she held a Junior Research Fellowship in the Faculty of Classics and Fitzwilliam College at the University of Cambridge. In 2011 she joined the University of Leicester as a Lecturer in Ancient History and Classical Archaeology. In 2020 she was promoted to Professor of Ancient History at Leicester, before being appointed later the same year as a Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Vienna.[1] Her research focusses on aspects of cultural interaction and identity, with a focus on the ancient Greek world and Anatolia from the Iron Age to the Classical period.[6] Her 2018 book Troy: Myth, City, Icon explores the mythic, the archaeological, and cultural significance of Troy. It was short-listed for the 2019 PROSE awards in the category Archaeology & Ancient History.[7][8] In 2020 Mac Sweeney received an ERC Consolidator Grant for the project Migration and the Making of the Ancient Greek World.[2][9] She was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize in 2015.[10] In 2017, she held a visiting Research Fellowship at Harvard's Center for Hellenic Studies.[11] Mac Sweeney co-ordinates the international network 'Claiming the Classical', exploring the use of classical antiquity within contemporary political rhetoric.[12] Since 2019 she is the academic editor of Anatolian Studies, the Journal of the British Institute at Ankara,[13] and served as a judge for the Runciman Award.[14] She appeared as a presenter on the BBC TV series Digging for Britain in 2019.[15] Selected publicationsBooks
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