Dr. Briana Jackson
Briana Jackson holds a PhD in Egyptian art and archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Currently, Briana is based in Cairo as a Digital Humanities postdoctoral fellow at the American Research Center in Egypt, and is also working with the Theban Mapping Project. She has taught courses at New York University, City College New York, Manhattanville College, Pratt Institute, Baruch College, and the University of Hartford on ancient Egypt, Roman history, and art history, and has worked for the IFA-NYU North Abydos Expedition on artifact processing, archiving, and surface collection. Her research interests are in Egyptian solar and lunar religion, the Amarna Period, international relations during the second millennium BCE, and archaeogaming. Her current research, which she aims to publish as a book, examines the spread of Atenism throughout Egypt and Sudan, how Aten temples across this space are connected, and what effect the religion had on society. Her archaeogaming interests focus on the representation of state development, urbanization, and power systems in games set in antiquity. Briana is also working for the NYU Ramesses II Temple in Abydos project, helping with publications and website building, and she is engaged with various other digital projects. Last and most important, she has three cats: Bagheera, Topaz, and Ta-Miu. She can be reached over her website: www.brianacjackson.com