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September 26 - November 16, 2018 |

AUDITORIUM THEATRE 2018-19

| 7

MARISSA STEVENS

People often ask me how I decided on Egyptology. And I

have no idea how to answer why I do what I do. I say banal

things like “I didn’t choose it; it chose me,” which really means

absolutely nothing.

When I am hanging out with other specialists of the ancient

world, we would never fathom asking each other such

a question. But when we step out into the larger world,

people look upon us as strange, and with good reason not

necessarily as freaks, but as people who have rejected the

normal world, who have chosen to leave modern existence

behind in favor of reading esoteric and broken papyri or piecing

together the fragments of temple relief.

Here is the extraordinary truth:

We Egyptologists are indeed interested in real life, but only

if it happened thousands of years ago. We are driven, for

reasons that we ourselves do not even understand, to go

back in time in any way that we can, puzzling out how ancient

people lived, fought, survived, and died; what drove the

ancient Egyptians, what they cared about; what they thought.

Only these investigations into their ancient drama can make

our existence in this modern world bearable, it seems.

And so I, some girl from Houston, Texas with no genetic

connection to Egypt or any part of the Middle East, am

best able to understand my place in the modern, crazy,

complicated, globalized, unequal world through the lens

of a strange and ancient place quite far away from my own

existence in time and space, an oasis in Northeast Africa, the

first regional state on the globe, the land of countless gods

fed and clothed in their dark temple sanctuaries every day,

the home of golden pharaohs and millions of peasants who

couldn’t even look their human god-king in the eye.

In [my upcoming book]

When Women Ruled the World

, I focus

on six Ancient Egyptian queens MerNeith, Neferusobek,

Sobeknofru, Hatshepsut, Nefertiti, Tawosret, and Cleopatra

and I ask why the Egyptians allowed women to take power

more regularly and systematically than anywhere else on earth.

I also look at what our human hostility towards female power is

all about. This is the most political book I have ever written and

the most scientifically grounded one, because I am reading a lot

of evolutionary psychology and cognitive biology differences

between males and females and trying to understand our

human reaction to power. I am looking for patterns as I try to

understand what makes these women similar.

In many ways this book is a tragedy, because the women who

are successful, such as Hatshepsut, are forgotten, erased,

removed. It’s very much about why women in Ancient Egypt

were allowed to take positions of power so regularly and

systematically, as opposed to anywhere else in the world. And

given that, does that mean that the Ancient Egyptians were

more liberal towards female power than the rest of the world?

Or is there something else going on? Where does it come from

and how does it work?

— Dr. Kara Cooney

Learn more from Dr. Kara Cooney at the Auditorium Theatre on September 26, 2018,

as part of the three-part

National Geographic Live

speaker series.