erika.meyer-dietrich@egyptologi.uu.se
Erika Meyer-Dietrich teaches and researches at the department of archaeology and ancient history at Uppsala University.
In her doctoral thesis: “Nechet und Nil. Ein ägyptischer Frauensarg des Mittleren Reiches aus religionsökologischer Sicht. Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, Historia Religionum 18, Uppsala 2001” she developed a theoretical model called ‘Dynamic Ecology of Religion’ to investigate religious symbolism of natural phenomena. Her research project in 2004-2005 provided her with the title assistant professor in history of religions: “Senebi und Selbst. Personenkonstituenten zur rituellen Wiedergeburt in einem Frauensarg des Mittleren Reiches. Orbus Biblicus et Orientalis 216, Fribourg 2006”. It dealt with cultural concepts on the human being and power-relations in ritualisation processes and in ancient Egyptian literature.
In 2009-2010 she held a fellowship at the research unit Historical Cultural Sciences at the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz. In addition to her field studies in Egypt she has been invited as teacher and guest lecturer in England, Germany, Norway and Switzerland. Her publications include several articles on ancient Egyptian religion, ritual and soundproduction, see the university publication database http://uu.diva-portal.org/smash/searchlist.jsf?searchId=1
Her current research focuses on sonic practices in public spaces, especially on the agency of the human voice in creating sound-spaces.
