HELL YEAH NEMESIS!!! No offense to those who are sad that BiG bOoBs LaDy isn’t the killer in DBD but... we’re going with the classics kthnx. Also, SUPER glad it’s Leon and Jill! Here’s hoping Chris and Claire are legendary skins!
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Greece

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from United States
HELL YEAH NEMESIS!!! No offense to those who are sad that BiG bOoBs LaDy isn’t the killer in DBD but... we’re going with the classics kthnx. Also, SUPER glad it’s Leon and Jill! Here’s hoping Chris and Claire are legendary skins!
the happiest millionaire is coming to disney+ this month can i get an amen from the back
Hi! I came across your blog when I searched "artefact studies." I'm also a ginger dabbling in Classics for my undergrad career, but I'm looking into artefact studies programs in the UK for my masters (I don't want to be a professor, so I'm thinking archaeology or museum work could be super cool.) If it's not too much trouble, would you mind telling me more about your studies and work? I would really like to know more about what you do! Good luck on your dissertation! -Emma
Hello! I’m glad you stumbed across me, and of course I can help - sorry I’ve not replied sooner, I’ve just finished my first week of work and have been very tired. It’s very possible to get into museum work if you persevere and volunteer (my course has already got about 50% of its graduates into a job, and we submitted dissertations two weeks ago) and making yourself useful is really the thing you need to do.
How much archaeology have you been doing as part of your degree? Have you been involved with any projects? The trick with archaeology, as I have found, is that you need experience plus a useful skillset which will get you invited back to places (I happily deal with bulk finds, which very few people have the tolerance for; this means I’ll be going out to Italy again next year and possibly Egypt in the spring, too). You cannot just go and dig. But if you’re into artefacts already, great - what’s your interest specifically?
I’m a ceramicist, which means I play with pottery 9-5. I’m currently working with an assemblage of legacy data from Syria - I wrote about the African Red Slip pottery for my master’s and I’m currently studying the Phocean Red Slip, which is from Turkey, 5th-7th century AD (way out of my preferred time period - but it’s pottery and a job and money and therefore you go for it - you can’t be too precious with time periods). At the moment I’m cataloging it all, which means I’m sitting with lots of books and comparing pot sherds to pictures of pots to work out which shape they are. It’s a bit brainbending but I’m getting the catalogue written up first (and drawn, so help me) and then I’ll go and do the research and have a bit of a play. For my dissertation I did a lot of work on the provenance of the pottery - with petrographic study - but for this stuff it’s not as applicable as we think there’s only the one production site for it. Which helps.
Um… with artefact studies courses in particular there are a couple of places in the UK which do them specifically but they require a very sciencey background, which you might not have if you’re a classicist (I didn’t). My course - which was Museum and Artefact Studies - does both and the artefact side involves a lot of scientific stuff you wouldn’t expect. I really got into it but others found it very hard, so YMMV, but it’s very much a secondary thing to the Museums side of it. I swung my course so I did a module of archaeology instead of others - playing with survey data - and my dissertation was obviously artefact based. I made it work for me and I was very pleased I did, it was definitely the right choice for me in terms of an MA.
For museums studies… if you’re not already volunteering at a museum you should start asap because normally courses want people with previous experience. Equally, if there’s local archaeology going on which is relevant to your interests - and even if it isn’t - get involved and start meeting people. Local groups could be working with people who could get you a job; and don’t be too precious about your time period, either. Who you know is vastly important in the heritage sector. Also you need to be willing to do random weird stuff at the drop of a hat, be fazed by very little indeed (27 boxes of pottery got washed in six days and no I don’t know how I managed that one while still smiling) and get used to differing degrees of slumming it for what you love. Oh, and not being a shitty person also helps unbelievably but your message was nice so I’m sure you’ll be fine!
Oh dear this is rather long winded. Whoops. Have a good weekend, my lovely! Publishing this for reference - if you can find my blog while googling other things then others might find it useful. Do drop me a line again if you like and we can chat privately :D
So always read well-tried authors, and if at any moment you find yourself wanting a change from a particular author, go back to ones you have read before.
Seneca
Jetsetting (again)
I’m not going to have much access to the internet for the next month, I don’t think.
This is because I, archaeologist jetsetter extraordinaire (lol), will be in Italy for the next month playing with pottery being an adult and managing the ceramics for a dig. Basically, as of 5AM tomorrow morning I’m going to need to at least seem like a competent human being with half a brain. Oh god.
So. See you all in a month, my lovelies! Wish me luck, I’m going to need it. With any luck this means I’ll get a hell-load of writing for my dissertation completed.
So things went a bit bonkers...
And now I have, like, a lot of new followers. Hello, everyone! Thanks for hopping onboard!
The problem is that now I feel obliged to entertain you and not just whinge about my life and choices.
To that end, if anyone would like to hear about why Aeneas is the fucking worst do let me know!
Just found your blog, i absolutely love it ! I haven't been on tumblr in a year so it was really nice to suddenly stumble across a really interesting blog.I have been studying Classics since GCSE, and at As and Alevel. ( studying Aenied, Iliiad and Art and Architecture this year -yay! ) Anyway I love the blog and the witty classics comments. x
OMG thank you!
I did Classical Civilisations at A-Level and it was awesome - and then I did straight Classics at uni (do not get me started on the Aeneid, I despise it with the heat of a thousand suns and have drunkenly opined on that many, many times) and now I'm doing an MA which involves a lot of Roman archaeology. So that's keeping me busy!
I hope you continue enjoying the Classics content - and best of luck with your studies! God only knows Classics is all I seem to post - though most of the witty comments are by no means mine :D xx
So... yesterday morning I moved to the North.
To be fair, it was pre-planned.
I've come to the North to do my master's degree! It's sodding cold (no heating until October), but its beautiful - I'm living outside the city centre and it's very, very green, which will keep me happy. It's also very far North, mind you. Ridiculously so. I mean, last Wednesday morning I was swimming in the sea in full sight of France at home.
But yeah... I'm here to study pottery and museums and things. Which should be fun! Hopefully. My reading list starts with African Art and finishes with metallurgy in the USSR, with a good amount of Roman stuff on there so I shall be a happy panda, with any luck.
(In other news, I've probably maybe also managed to make friends as well, which is always a start...)