6 Elon undergraduates presented at the virtual American Academy of Religion's Southeastern regional conference with the theme of Race, Religion, and Health: Epidemics of Disparity
Every spring, Elon’s Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society and its Religious Studies Department bring a number of students to the Southeastern regional meeting of the American Academy of Religion and Society of Biblical Literature (AAR/SBL SE).
At those conferences, students are able to present research and learn the skills of networking in a professional setting. Although academic meetings all around the world have been moved to online formats this year, during the weekend of March 12, Elon Department of Religious Studies faculty members Brian Pennington and Amy Allocco arranged a virtual conference experience for students from a variety of majors so they could have some opportunity for the professionalization that conference attendance can entail.
Six 榴莲app官方网站入 seniors presented the results of long-term, faculty mentored research in the Undergraduate Research sessions of the AAR/SBL SE virtual meeting, sponsored by Florida State University. Eight other students attended the conference on Zoom to support the seniors and to learn conference culture in hopes of presenting there in a future year.
In a typical year, students would attend the conference’s opening reception and mingle with scholars in attendance. This year, masked and socially distanced, they dressed up, attended the conference’s opening session in McEwen’s screening room, and then took over Snow Atrium for a pandemic-inflected reception experience. Although there was no Elon van ride to a different state together, no shared hotel accommodations, and little chance to meet their peers from other universities, Elon’s student attendees nonetheless demonstrated the outstanding work they can do under the guidance of Elon faculty.
The following senior projects presented at the conference were developed in Elon’s signature undergraduate research programs, including Multifaith Scholars, Elon College Fellows and Honors Fellows:
- Annabelle Baker: 鈥淭he Role of Bollywood in Cultivating Cultural Connection with Indian Diaspora鈥 (Mentor: Brian Pennington)
- Srija Dutta:聽 鈥淪outh Asian College-Aged Women and the Influence of Religion and Cultural Factors on Sexual Decision Making鈥 (Mentor: Amanda Tapler)
- Madison Gray: 鈥淐ambodian American Religion in Contemporary American Diaspora鈥 (Mentor: Brian Pennington)
- Sarah Jane Mcdonald: 鈥溾楾he Church is a Piece of Home鈥: Religious Experiences of East and Central African Refugees鈥 (Mentor: Mussa Idris)
- Kylee Smith: 鈥淧ractices, Beliefs, and Identities: Muslim Immigrants Acculturation to the United States鈥 (Mentor: Sandy Marshall)
- Kaitlin Theall: 鈥淧romoting Sufism as a Counter-Extremism Strategy in the Moroccan Press鈥 (Mentor: Ariela Marcus-Sells)
In addition to undergraduate presentations, Adjunct Assistant Professors Hunter Bandy and Helen Orr presented 鈥淭he Medicalization of Religious and Political Talent in 16th-century Ka虅rkiya虅 Gilan鈥 and “Dark Humor and Healing: Post-War Explorations in Trauma, Laughter, and Transgression,” respectively.
Many of these senior projects will be featured during 榴莲app官方网站入 annual Student Undergraduate Research Forum (SURF) on April 27.