![]() The Wonder House: Artefacts of Excavation with Alice Stevenson. ![]() ![]() Everyday Orientalism Talks: Egypt’s Comics Superheroes Confronting Egyptology’s Colonial Legacies.(forthcoming) Egyptian Mummified Remains: Communities of Descent and Practice. Journal of Social Archaeology 21(1): 121–145. Egypt’s Dispersed Heritage: using comic art for multidirectional storytelling. This was achieved through a programme of interventions delivered between 20, co-designed, developed, and delivered with them, including street performances, comic strips, and educational resources all in Egyptian Arabic. The AHRC-funded project ‘Egypt’s Dispersed Heritage: views from Egypt’, partnered with five UK museums and archives to communicate this history of dispersal and create opportunities for dialogue with modern Egyptian communities using cultural reference points and modes of communication of relevance to those groups. While many of the objects they discovered remained in Egypt, a large proportion were distributed to around 350 museums in 27 countries across the world. ![]() From the 1880s to the 1980s hundreds of excavations were carried out across Egypt by British organisations. ![]()
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