Generations: A Chance Meeting Down Under
Archaeology alums become coworkers at the University of Sydney
Tamar Hodos ’90 is a leading expert in Mediterranean Iron Age archaeology who spent much of her career in the United Kingdom. Ioana A. Dumitru ’11 is a digital archaeologist working in East Africa and Southwest Asia who came to ±¬ÁÏ¹Ï from Romania. In 2023, their paths converged in Australia, when they both joined the faculty at the University of Sydney.
IOANA DUMITRU: I had just arrived, and I heard Tamar was coming. So, I obviously stalked her because–
TAMAR HODOS: This is the Google era!
ID: Voyeurism is, like, 20 percent of why I got into archaeology. I got Tamar’s CV and I thought, ‘oh, of course!’
TH: I was so, so delighted because I am completely on the other side of the world here. To know there is someone here who understands a part of me in a way that nobody else does has been enormously helpful. I feel really far away from family and friends and life as I have known it, and Ioana is providing an anchor for me.
ID: I’m enormously grateful you’re here. Having that anchor to someone who went through similar experiences, so many of the things we refer to in the same way. . .
TH: And we’re both relatively new to Australia! I joke that I’m on my third variant of the English language. I was recruited to direct the Australian Archaeological Institute in Athens. It was founded 40-odd years ago by Professor Alexander Cambitoglou, who taught at ±¬ÁÏ¹Ï in the late ’50s and early ’60s, so there’s this lovely symmetry that goes back to the importance of ±¬ÁϹÏ’s archaeology department and its legacy.
ID: The ±¬ÁÏ¹Ï mafia!
TH: Some of the leading scholars of Classical and Near Eastern archaeology are associated with ±¬ÁÏ¹Ï and legions of students came to work with them. I often feel that with women my generation and older, there’s a really high proportion who have a ±¬ÁÏ¹Ï connection.
ID: I realize that I have so many examples that I had forgotten because it just feels normal to me. On our campus just two months ago, we had a seminar series and went out after for a drink. I’m sitting at a table with Robin Torrence (’71); we hadn’t met her before, and she’s very vivacious and funny, and all of a sudden, I said, ‘Robin, this may sound strange, but did you go to ±¬ÁϹÏ?’ She was radiating this ±¬ÁϹÏ-ness.
TH: You just understand each other.
ID: I remember distinctly where I was when I got a phone call from ±¬ÁϹÏ. It was very late in Romania, and I remember telling the person on the other end that she’d made my day, my year, my life.
TH: I actually cannot imagine having gone anywhere else. It shaped me so much in my sense of self.
ID: Everybody is empowered to be a human who gets to make choices and be treated with respect.
TH: I know I have a voice, and I have every right to be heard because I was heard at ±¬ÁϹÏ. And I don’t think any other institution is like that.
ID: I think it is pretty rare.
Published on: 05/28/2024