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Why Stuff Matters: Objects, Power and the Past

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Apr 20, 2026
Mary Beard, classicist known for public-facing work on ancient Rome and Greece. Greg Doran, theatre director who tracks Shakespeare’s First Folios. Dr Sophia Adams, British Museum curator of Iron Age finds. They examine how everyday objects, burned hoards and well-used books reveal past lives, power, ritual and the emotional pull of material traces. Short, vivid stories and surprising artifacts bring history tactile and immediate.
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INSIGHT

Everyday Objects Unlock Real Ancient Lives

  • Mary Beard argues studying everyday objects reveals lives missed by canonical texts and can be more illuminating than focusing on emperors and battles.
  • She highlights pottery, bread and domestic items as evidence that lets us ‘time travel’ into ordinary ancient lives.
INSIGHT

Familiarity And Alienness Of The Ancient Everyday

  • Beard stresses a paradox: ordinary ancient people feel familiar yet were significantly different in everyday realities like mirrors and identity.
  • Example: polished metal mirrors were poor, so many recognised their own face only in puddles, altering self‑identity.
INSIGHT

Classics Get Politicised By Left And Right

  • Mary Beard warns classical antiquity has been appropriated by both political left and right, so scholars must confront how texts and objects are used as propaganda.
  • She cites dictators using Roman imagery and Marx studying Greek philosophy as examples.
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