Key Pages
Main GroupSarah Levin-Richardson is in her third year of the Ph.D. program in Classical Archaeology at Stanford University. She received her B.A. in Classical Archaeology and Political Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her research focuses on erotic art and spaces in the Roman empire and she has excavated at Azoria, Crete, and with the IRC-Oxford-Stanford dig in the Roman Forum (Post Aedem Castoris). Her interests include the role of the photographer and the photograph in archaeological discourse, the construction of gender in antiquity, textual and visual literacy, the archaeology of texts, and the interactions of art and text. She can be reached at sarahlr@stanford.edu.
Lela Urquhart is a third year Ph.D. student in Classicial Archaeology at Stanford University. She graduated with a B.A. in Classicial Archaeology and Greek from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2002. Research in colonization studies, ethnicity, ancient landscapes and agriculture have led her to focus on the social, economic, and cultural relationships that developed in the western Mediterranean from the 8th through the 6th centuries BC. She has worked with UNC-Chapel Hill's Research Labs of Archaeology and has excavated at sites in North Carolina, Sicily, Crete, and Israel. She can be contacted at lelau@stanford.edu.
Return home
Lela Urquhart, Stacey Camp and Sarah Levin-Richardson