Stepping Through Time: Repeat Photography in Petra, Jordan

Petra's famous Khazneh, or treasury, photographed in 1924 and again in 2024.
Dr Kaelin Groom

Petra's famous Khazneh, or treasury, photographed in 1924 and again in 2024.

Professor Kaelin Groom will be visiting campus this week to discuss her exciting new book on Petra, Jordan, that explores the use of repeat photography to document, examine and analyze environmental and cultural change in the magical, ruined city of Petra. Drawing on more than a century of original photographs for comparison, Groom reconstructs the original photographic vantage points to capture evidence of change across Petra over a century in PETRA Rephotographed.

This detailed and striking book reveals a changing ageless place from the impact of tourism, nature, development and past attempts at conservation. Her talk will address the ideas of Petra's landscape, the human and natural influences on change and this time-tested method for historical reconstruction, but also for advancing interdisciplinary conversations around cultural resilience, stewardship and the lived experience of heritage sites and indigenous peoples.

Groom's talks are known for her striking before-and-after photographs, insights from extensive fieldwork and discussions of the ethical and practical implications of researching often disputed and dynamic landscapes. This is a talk not to be missed, and a special event to have her sign your book, hosted by the Geosciences Department with the King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies. Please join us for this visually stunning presentation, followed by her book-signing, with the delectable Arabic food catered by Toot Beirut restaurant of Rogers.

Groom is a notable alumna of the U of A's geosciences, Middle East studies and environmental dynamics programs, having studied under University Professor Tom Paradise. She is a geographer, geomorphologist, heritage scientist and educator at Arizona State University in the School of Geographical Sciences & Urban Planning, where her teaching and research address how landscapes change over time and what those changes reveal about landscape, geology, vegetation, stone architecture, culture and resilience. Groom's a two-time Fulbright scholar and has spent several years working in Jordan, while collaborating with organizations including ACOR, SCHEP, UNESCO, the U.S. State Department and the American Explorers Club.

Her research is driven by a determined curiosity and a deep love for the delicate, unique beauty of our Earth's deserts. Her new book focuses on Petra, using repeat photography to tell the story of a place shaped by time, people and shifting perspectives. It is already receiving international accolades. For more information: www.kmgroom.com or at amazon.com/kaelin groom petra.

The Petra talk and book-signing will from 3-5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 3, Gearhart Hall Auditorium room 26.

Contacts

Tom Paradise, professor of geosciences and Middle East studies
Department of Geosciences
479-575-3355, paradise@uark.edu

Renato Despain, program coordinator
King Fahd Center for Middle East Studies
479-575-4373, rbetim@uark.edu

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