Leidwanger Selected for 2017-18 Whiting Public Engagement Fellowship

By mp4071@nyu.edu
07/05/2017

Former Visiting Research Scholar (2001-12) Justin Leidwanger, currently assistant professor in the Department of Classics at Stanford University, has been selected as a recipient of the 2017-18 Whiting Public Engagement Fellowship.

Leidwanger's project, Five Boats: Snapshots of Mediterranean Connections, is a traveling multimedia exhibit which uses innovative technology to offer audiences a visceral experience of the maritime history of the region. "Time and time again, Sicily and the Mediterranean have been a focal point of contrast, cooperation, and conflict, reflected in a breadth of stories about connections and shipwrecks that mark lost journeys... The pop-up exhibit is organized around five central objects – each encapsulating a different facet of maritime interaction, from colonization, commerce, and fishing to war and the refugee movement – immersed in imagery, sound, and linked digital content. From its initial staging in southeast Sicily, the traveling exhibit aims to challenge a broad audience in Europe and North America to reflect on the unifying long-term power of connections across the waves."

Justin Leidwanger is an assistant professor in the Department of Classics at Stanford University. His research and fieldwork focus primarily on the role of maritime networks in structuring Roman socioeconomic life. In 2012, he launched the Marzamemi Maritime Heritage Project in southeast Sicily, which combines survey and excavation with maritime heritage education and museum and tourism development. Since 2013 he has directed excavation of the famous 6th-century CE Marzamemi “church wreck,” which sank while carrying a massive cargo of prefabricated architectural and decorative stone elements. His lab at the Stanford Archaeology Center serves as a research base for fieldwork, finds analysis, and digital modeling. He is an active fellow of the Penn Cultural Heritage Center, lecturer in the Archaeological Institute of America’s national program, and affiliated scholar of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology.