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Elizabeth Langridge-Noti

Director of Global Research and Academic Programs in Global Initiatives

Dr. Elizabeth Langridge-Noti received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Classical Archaeology from Princeton University and is a UC Alumna with B.A. from UC Berkeley.   She is currently the inaugural Director of Global Research and Academic Programs in Global Initiatives at UC San Diego.  

Dr. Langridge-Noti previously served as a professor of the ancient world at the American College of Greece, Deree in Athens, Greece, teaching courses about the ancient world across disciplines of archaeology, art history, history, and literature and co-teaching with a colleague from Duke University virtual collaborative courses on Greek Archaeology to students at both Duke and Deree.  She has also taught on-site classes in Greece for faculty through NYU’s Faculty Resource Network, and for graduate students at the British School of Archaeology and as leader of a Summer Session of the American School of Classical Archaeology at Athens. 

Her archaeological research and publication focuses on ancient Greek pottery on topics ranging from images and story-telling on Attic Archaic and Classical figured pottery to pottery for food preparation and consumption in Laconia.  Together with Dr. Mark Stansbury-O’Donnell, she is the founder of the Pottery Resource Network that mentors and supports scholars presenting and publishing on topics focused on ancient Mediterranean figured pottery and meets biannually.  She currently excavates at the site of Geraki (ancient Geronthrai) in Laconia where she is responsible for the Hellenistic pottery and has previously excavated amongst other places at the sites of Ancient Corinth and the Sanctuary of Zeus at Ancient Nemea for both of which she curated exhibits.  Dr. Langridge-Noti also presents and publishes regularly on faculty global engagement, including co-authoring the section on global learning for UC Davis’ Just-In-Time-Teaching guide and a co-authored chapter in NAFSA’s Guide to International Partnerships.

For her archaeological work, she has held a Humanities-Writ-Large Fellowship at Duke University and the T.B.L. Webster Lectureship at the Institute for Classical Studies in London, as well as receiving funding from the British Academy and the Loeb Classical Library Foundation at Harvard University.