Ellie Bennet and Omar N’Shea: Introduction
Bruno Biermann: “Where Are Your Daughters, Jerusalem?” The Embodiment of Gender and Family Relations in Iron Age Levantine Material Culture
Mina Dabbagh: Spatial Analysis of Gender: A Model of Spaces Assigned to Women in the Cultural Structure and Economies of Elam
Katrien De Graef: The Queen’s Gambit: Power, Kinship, and Heterarchy in Sukkalmah Elam (ca. 2025 – ca. 1585 BCE)
Kelsie Ehalt: Dogs, Gods, Kings, and Demons: Canine Relationships to Complicit Masculinities in Mesopotamian Culture
Fumi Karahashi and Agnès Garcia-Ventura: Coming Out of the Assyriological Closet? Some Insights on Sex, Gender, and Sexual Identities of the Gala in Presargonic Lagaš
Uroš Matić: Gendered Lives in Ancient Avaris: Some Cautionary Notes
Neville McFerrin: Beyond Binaries: Mediated Bodies, Productive Entanglements, and Categorical Slippages at Persepolis
Cécile Michel: Giving Ancient Near Eastern Women a Voice in the History for the General Public
Sonia Mzali: Enanatuma, Priestess and Builder: Commemorative Inscriptions as Agency
Emanuel Pfoh: Abigail’s Wisdom: Analysing Patronage and Gender in the Hebrew Bible
Ludovico Portuese: Un homme et une femme: Humanly Divine Love Affairs in the Garden Scene of Assurbanipal
Regine Pruzsinszky: “Singing the Rug” or Weaving Singers? The Case of Temple Singers in the Ur III Period
Allison Thomason: The Challenges of Labels for Studying Gender in the Ancient Near East: A Way Forward
Luciana Urbano: Blood: Reflections on the Construction of Political Ties in the Old Babylonian Sources of Mari (Modern Tell Hariri) and Šubat-Enlil/Šehna (Modern Tell Leilan) from the New Kinship Studies
Lorenzo Verderame: In the Interstices of Power: Ur III Women’s Cylinder Seals
Yoko Watai: Wives’ Involvement in the Household Economy: A Study of Urban Families in the “Long Sixth Century” in Babylonia
Gioele Zisa: Sex Is Violence: War and Hunting Metaphors in Akkadian Love and Sexual Literature
Ann K. Guinan: GeMANE Matters — Gender Studies in Troubled Times: The Leader of Rats cannot be a Lion