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Amelie Jochmus – Universität Innsbruck

Amelie Jochmus

Picture of Amelie Jochmus

Education

  • October 2018 – October 2021: Bachelor’s programme Archaeologies (University of Innsbruck) with a specialization in “classical archaeology and archaeology of the Roman provinces” and the Bachelor’s Thesis “Die Darstellung von Kult- und Götterbildern in Kontext mit Tieropfern bzw. nicht mythologischen Szenen in der attisch schwarz- und rotfigurigen Vasenmalerei “
  • October 2021 – October 2023: master’s programme Archaeologies (University of Innsbruck) with a specialization in “classical archaeology and archaeology of the Roman provinces” and the master’s Thesis “Unteritalisch-sizilisch rotfigurige Keramik vom Monte Iato”
  • Since October 2021: Doctoral programme in Humanities and Cultural studies at the Faculty of Philosophy and History (University of Innsbruck) with the dissertation “Unteritalisch-sizilisch rotfigurige Keramik zwischen Karthago und Syrakus im zweigeteilten Sizilien des späten 5., 4. und 3. Jahrhunderts v. Chr.” (working title)

Academic career

  • Since 2019: Research campaigns in Austria and Italy: Aguntum, Klosterfrauenbichl Lienz, Burchbichl Irschen, Monte Iato (Sicily), Pompeji (Italy)
  • November 2020 – January 2021: Internship at the “Archäologisches Universitätsmuseum Innsbruck” under assoz.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Florian M. Müller Bakk.
  • March 2021 – June 2021: Student assistant at the Institute of Archaeologies (University of Innsbruck) under assoz.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Florian M. Müller Bakk.
  • January 2022 – October 2024: Student/scientific (since October 2023) project-assistant at the Institute of Archaeologies (University of Innsbruck), FWF project P34941 „The Parochial City at Hellenistic Monte Iato and the World beyond Peristyle House 1“ under Univ.-Prof. Dr. Erich Kistler
  • Since October 2024: University assistant at the Institute of Archaeologies (University of Innsbruck)

Research interests

  • South-Italian and Sicilian red-figured pottery
  • Antique vase painting
  • Archaeology of the ancient Mediterranean (with focus on Sicily)
  • Consumption practises (with focus on ancient pottery)

Publications

  • P. L. Huber – A. J. Jochmus – S. Kronthaler – C. Leclerc – M. Pomaro – M.  Radumilo – E. Kistler, Die „Ländliche Stadt“. Lokalisierungsformen von Urbanität im Hinter- und Binnenland, H-Soz-Kult, 2022, http://www.hsozkult.de/conferencereport/id/fdkn-127918

Lectures

  • „Der Doryphoros des Polyklet“, contribution to the series “Im Dialog mit der Antike: Skulpturen zum Sprechen bringen“, Archäologische Gesellschaft Innsbruck (13.03.2024)
  • „Kontinuität oder Diskontinuität? Zur Konsumption unteritalisch-sizilisch rotfiguriger Keramik auf dem Monte Iato (Sizilien)“, DAI Forschungscluster 6 „Connected Cultures? Konzepte, Phänomene, Praktiken kultureller Interaktion”. Tagung vom 7. bis 9. November 2023 in Innsbruck zum Aspekt „Diskontinuität – Desintegration – Differenz“ (08.11.2023)
  • „Die unteritalisch-sizilisch rotfigurige Keramik vom Monte Iato“, 2. Monte Iato Workshop, Innsbruck 23. und 24. März 2023 (24.03.2023)
  • „Xoanon und Thysia: Kultstatuen und Tieropferszenen in der attischen Vasenmalerei“, Archäologische Gesellschaft Innsbruck (09.03.2023)

Scholarships

  • 2020 – 2022: merit scholarship by the Faculty of Philosophy and History of the University of Innsbruck

Other

  • Since 2020: Secretary of the “Archäologische Gesellschaft Innsbruck”
  • Since Oktober 2024: affiliated member of the cluster of excellence “Eurasian Transformations”

Dissertation Project

Working title: “Unteritalisch-sizilisch rotfigurige Keramik zwischen Karthago und Syrakus im zweigeteilten Sizilien des späten 5., 4. und 3. Jahrhunderts v. Chr.”

The dissertation project includes research into the archaeological contextualisation of South-Italian and Sicilian red-figure pottery in Sicily in the late 5th, 4th and 3rd centuries BC, a time which was mostly shaped by the geopolitical conflict between Syracuse and Carthage. Using various analytical categories, the aim of the project is to make out con- and divergent consumption patterns between the Punic west and the Syracusan east of the island. Moving away from the important historical events of this period, however, the thesis focuses primarily on the actors of the indigenous settlements of the Sicilian inland and the functionality of South-Italian and Sicilian red-figure pottery as a proxy for the visualisation of local agencies as well as group dynamics and identity formation within these indigenous communities. The hypothesis of the dissertation is that the supposedly clear boundary between the Carthaginian west and the Syracusan east of Sicily is blurred based on the contextualisation of South-Italian und Sicilian red-figure pottery in the micro-consumption-landscapes of the individual archaeological features. The results of the work could therefore contribute to a deeper understanding of the role of local communities in western Sicily in the conflict between Syracuse and Carthage from the 5th to the end of the 3rd century BC.

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