Religious Studies | Today at Elon | 消消犯 /u/news Fri, 05 Jun 2026 17:49:13 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Geoffrey Claussen authors article on musar 消消犯s amid mass violence /u/news/2026/06/01/geoffrey-claussen-authors-article-on-musar-消消犯s-amid-mass-violence/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:34:42 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049043 An article by Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies, and chair of the Department of Religious Studies, was published in the journal CrossCurrents.

The article is titled Kindness, Compassion, Love, and Generosity at a Time of Mass Killing: The Musar Teachings of Rabbi Amy Eilberg.

In the article, Claussen analyzes the musar (virtue/character-focused) 消消犯s of Rabbi Amy Eilberg, the first woman ordained as a rabbi within Conservative Judaism. He focuses on how Eilberg’s work has emphasized kindness, compassion, love and generosity and how her writing has developed in response to extreme violence and suffering in Israel/Palestine since Oct. 7, 2023.

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Monteith publishes research about queer polyamorous marriage in a Christian boarding school /u/news/2026/06/01/monteith-publishes-research-about-queer-polyamorous-marriage-in-a-christian-boarding-school/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:23:29 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049155 Andrew Monteith in a blue shirt in front of the Alamance Building fountain
Associate Professor of Religious Studies Andrew Monteith

In 2023, Associate Professor of Religious Studies Andrew Monteith was at the Chicago Historical Society, hoping to find material related to the eugenics movement in the records of the Juvenile Psychopathic Institute. Much to his surprise, one of the folders contained nearly 150 pages of autobiographical text addressing sex between men in the 1910s-20s, authored by an inmate at Pontiac Prison. Homosexuality was illegal in this era, and in the late 1920s the Chicago police ran sting operations against gay men. Henry was caught in one of these raids.

Appearing in the most recent edition of QTR: Trans and Queer Studies in Religion, Monteiths article focuses on a critical section of Henrys autobiography in which Henry explains a polyamorous marriage with two other boys at a Christian boarding school. Henrys strict, religious parents boarded him at the Todd Seminary for Boys in Woodstock, Illinois, hoping the experience would “straighten him out.” Single-sex institutions (schools, prisons, etc.) have often had generative spaces for queer relationships, and boys at Todd Seminary were no different. Henry found a romantic triad with Will and Junior, although Juniors role in the marriage leaned asexual.

Monteith employs religious studies methodologies to make sense of the wedding. Rather than assuming the ceremony was satire simply because of the boys age, Monteith points to Henrys own description of the wedding as serious business. The ritual objects involvedparticularly a homemade wedding license that named all three boyshelped them define and validate their union. Henrys account is tragic, however, since graduation meant separation, and Henry was never able to recover another union like it. The irony is that for someone with Henrys personality, the Christian boarding school offered a more stable environment for queer romance than the more freewheeling life of gay Chicago did.

Henrys imprisonment took a psychological toll, and his autobiography expresses ambivalence about his sexual orientation. On one hand, he defends his queer marriage as beautiful, but on the other, he explains that he wishes to undergo conversion therapy at an asylum. After leaving Pontiac Prison, Henry married a woman and raised multiple children.

The full open-access article can be found online:

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Elon welcomes 10th class of Multifaith Scholars /u/news/2026/04/29/elon-welcomes-tenth-class-of-multifaith-scholars/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 13:05:57 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045738
The 10th class of Multifaith Scholars.

Six rising juniors have been named members of the tenth class of Multifaith Scholars, a two-year fellows program for juniors and seniors that offers a closely mentored, experientially rich and intellectually rigorous educational opportunity for students with significant potential.

After a highly selective application and interview process, students are awarded $5,000 annually to support research and study in global contexts connected with religious diversity and multi-religious societies. 消消犯 who show great potential as academically curious and socially engaged leaders committed to their own ongoing development and the enhancement of their local and global communities are selected each spring.

I am delighted to welcome these six impressive rising juniors into the Multifaith Scholars program and look forward to supporting their compelling projects over the next two years, said Amy Allocco, director of the Multifaith Scholars program. Their research interests include music and Christian religious experience, linguistic anthropology and the vocabulary of faith, religious diversity in clinical settings, gender and religious roles in Asian art, the intersection of biomedicine and traditional healing practices and the history of Black churches here in Alamance County.

In addition to pursuing their faculty-mentored 消消犯 research projects and undertaking academic coursework in religious studies and interreligious studies, the scholars will extend the programs ongoing community partnership with the Burlington Masjid. Through the partnership, scholars teach English classes, participate in youth and social events with the local Muslim community, join community garden workdays, volunteer with the food pantry and take part in potlucks and iftar meals during Ramadan.

It is wonderful to welcome such a strong class with such diverse academic interests, reflected Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society, which supports the Multifaith Scholars program. As we approach the tenth anniversary of the MFS, it is gratifying to see so many clear signs of the program’s maturity and significance: our largest class ever, the inclusion of seven new faculty mentors, and students majoring in three disciplines never before represented in MFS.

The 2026-2028 Multifaith Scholars

Addison Anderson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.Majors: History, Sociology

Minors: Museum Studies, Public History, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:Amanda Kleintop (History and Geography)

Project Title: History and Memory of Alamance Countys Black Churches

Proposed Research: Examine the relationship between Alamance County African American churches and local politics in North Carolina from Reconstruction through 1900.

Blair Berenson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Anthropology

Minors: Jewish Studies, Sociology, Philosophy and Interreligious Studies

Mentors:Amy Allocco (Religious Studies) and Devin Proctor (Sociology & Anthropology)

Project Title: An Anthropological Approach to Cross-Generational Shifts in Hindu and Jewish Perspectives of Faith in the US

Proposed Research: Conduct fieldwork in Jewish and Hindu communities in Atlanta to understand how different generations articulate the concept of faith.

Katie Castelo

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Biochemistry

Minors: Neuroscience, Spanish, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:Cathy Quay (Nursing)

Project Title: Bridging Faith and Medicine: Improving Cultural Awareness of Religious Practices in the Healthcare System

Proposed Research: Explore the healthcare industrys approach to death and ways it can be more open to diverse religious practices.

Faith Elliott

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Neuroscience

Minors: Expressive Arts and Interreligious Studies

Mentors:Lynn Huber (Religious Studies) and Morgan Patrick (Music Theory)

Project Title: Neurotheology: An Interdisciplinary Study into Sacred Music and Feelings of Well-Being

Proposed Research: Examine the historical significance of music and understand and measure the behavioral impact associated with an emotional, transcendent spiritual experience and the well-being that results from listening.

Mariama Jalloh

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Public Health

Minors: Biology and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:Sandra Darfour-Oduro (Public Health)

Project Title: Faith, Healers, and Health: How Religious Beliefs and Community Trust Shape Healthcare Decisions in West African Communities

Proposed Research: Examine how religious leaders and traditional healers influence healthcare decisions in communities in Ghana, and how public health programs can partner with these practitioners to improve health education outcomes.

Ryleigh Rouse

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Majors: Art History, Religious Studies

Minors: Museum Studies and Public History and Asian Studies

Mentor:Kirstin Ringelberg (Art History)

Project Title: Religions Impact on Japanese Women: Through an Art Historical Lens

Proposed Research: Employ art as a lens to examine how religion shaped gender perceptions and Japanese womens roles.

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Aftab S. Jassal delivers Religious Studies Powell Lecture /u/news/2026/04/22/aftab-s-jassal-delivers-religious-studies-powell-lecture/ Wed, 22 Apr 2026 13:55:39 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044964 消消犯 welcomed Aftab S. Jassal, associate professor of anthropology at the University of California San Diego, as this years speaker for the Rex G. and Ina Mae Powell Endowed Lecture in Religious Studies. Known for his rich fieldwork and evocative ethnographic storytelling, Jassal delivered a compelling talk drawn from his recent book Gods in the World: Placemaking and Healing in the Himalayas.

Jassals research centers on the dynamic relationships among person, place and divinity in South Asia, particularly in the Himalayan region of Uttarakhand in northern India. Through years of ethnographic fieldwork, he has explored how Hindu communities actively construct and experience sacred worlds through ritual practices such as shrine-building, pilgrimage, festival celebrations and spirit possession.

A key theme of the lecture was the idea that Hindu deities are not fixed but relational and mobile, often requiring placemaking practices to remain connected to human communities. Jassal discussed how ritualsincluding the relocation of deities to more suitable or accessible sitesserve as what he described as technologies of healing that reshape social realities. These practices, he argued, reveal the agency not only of human participants but also of non-human actors, such as deities themselves.

In addition to the lecture, Jassal shared a short documentary film, offering students a vivid, sensory perspective on his research. The film emphasized the importance of sound, movement, and atmosphereelements that written ethnography alone cannot fully capture. 消消犯 noted that this visual component deepened their understanding of the material, making the lived realities of ritual practice more tangible.

The day prior to his lecture, Jassal participated in a casual lunch with students, creating space for informal conversation about his work, academic journey and the role of storytelling in research. Attendees described him as engaging, passionate and genuinely enthusiastic about student curiosity and dialogue. Following lunch, Jassal also visited Amy Alloccos 4000-level Religious Studies seminar, Ghosts Demons, and Ancestors in Asian Religions, where students had been assigned chapters of his book and came prepared to engage directly with his research. During the class, students asked questions about Jassals fieldwork, methods, and key concepts like placemaking, creating an interactive and discussion-based environment. The session allowed students to connect course material with a guest scholar, deepening their understanding through conversation and critical engagement. Jassal emphasized the importance of intellectual openness and positionality in ethnographic research. His reflections encouraged students to think critically about how knowledge is produced and whose voices are amplified.

By the end of the lecture, it was clear that Jassals work not only expands scholarly conversations about religion and anthropology but also resonates deeply with students exploring questions of culture, practice, and representation. His visit left a lasting impression the importance of bringing diverse worlds into conversation.

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Sheila Otieno publishes chapter on gender and poverty /u/news/2026/04/20/sheila-otieno-publishes-chapter-on-gender-and-poverty/ Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:41:04 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044659 A chapter authored by Sheila Otieno, assistant professor of religious studies and distinguished emerging scholar in religious studies, was published as part of Bloomsbury Publishings Cultural Histories series.

The series is a multi-volume set that surveys the social and cultural construction of specific subjects across six historical periods, from Antiquity to the Modern Age. Otienos chapter, titled Poverty and Gender: A Cultural History, appears in Volume 6 of the Anthology, A Cultural History of Poverty, edited by Steven Beaudoin and Richard Axtell, which covers the Modern Age.

The chapter thoughtfully applies insights from Womanist and African feminist thinkers to examine poverty and gender as central global ethical issues. It discusses how Nnobi women in Igboland, Nigeria, historically challenged gender and patriarchal norms by leveraging religio-cultural categories to gain wealth and influence. Highlighting the persistence of the gender pay gap, it notes that labor and wages are largely male-centered and thus discriminate against non-male agents.

By explaining how women and LGBTQ individuals navigate these constraints, Otieno argues that women and other genders tend to produce unusual labor market outcomes, which are still measured using male statistics and language, thereby greatly undermining their effort, productivity and value.

The chapter also advocates viewing poverty as a collective moral issue rooted in communities rather than in individual agents, emphasizing how labor markets continue to erode traditional religio-cultural practices across Africa and Asia, such as the selection of trokosi shrine guardians in Ghana and the exploitation of widows and their inheritance in various African contexts.

Covering broad global issues faced by women, the chapter underscores how systemic poverty affects women worldwide. It calls for just treatment and community-focused socioethical interventions to address the disproportionate impact of capitalist systems on non-male laborers and their labor.

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Across disciplines, Elon faculty integrate multifaith understanding into the classroom /u/news/2026/04/15/across-disciplines-elon-faculty-integrate-multifaith-understanding-into-the-classroom/ Wed, 15 Apr 2026 16:20:44 +0000 /u/news/?p=1044270

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At 消消犯, faculty say preparing students means helping them understand the people they will interact with throughout their lives, and that includes the influence of faith and religious identity.

That commitment to multifaith understanding is a primary goal of the universitys Multifaith Strategic Plan, which strives to support opportunities for multifaith learning and engagement for all members of the academic community.

Elons Multifaith Strategic Plan is a promise to our students, faculty, staff and the wider community that we will take them seriously as whole, complex people, said Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society.

The multifaith experience

The Multifaith Scholars Program is a two-year program, founded in 2016, that emphasizes interdisciplinary learning as student scholars undertake original research projects and study in global contexts connected with religious diversity and multireligious societies.

Amy Allocco in front of a wall of books
Amy Allocco, professor of religious studies, photographed May 4, 2023.

Our work is richer when we have students bringing questions from their own disciplines, said Amy Allocco, director of the program and professor of religious studies. It is a sign of a vibrant campus ecosystem when not only students but also their mentors can see their interests and expertise intersect with questions of interreligious contact, religion and society.

Allocco says that the breadth of disciplines represented by students and mentors participating in the program has widened each year. The current cohort includes students with diverse majors such as psychology, theatrical design, history, economics consulting, political science, religious studies, and international and global Studies. Owen Hayes 26, a history major with minors in political science and religious studies, is a 2024-2026 Multifaith Scholar studying the historical and contemporary relationship between Christian missionaries and Indigenous Australians.

I’ve always been interested in understanding the interreligious encounters of the world, like global Christianity and understanding how different communities can come together and understand such an important religious concept in such different, varying ways, but still have that belief of Christianity, Hayes said.

The interreligious studies minor also allows students to analyze the historical and contemporary encounters between and interactions among religious communities and traditions.

Elon has done incredible work in enfranchising multifaith as an academic as well as a student affairs initiative and aligning and even blending those areas in meaningful ways that enhance the student experience, Allocco said.

Multifaith in the classroom (and clinic)

In the Department of Nursing, faculty dont just train future healthcare professionals on specific medical assessments but, as Assistant Professor of Nursing Lori Hubbard says, they prepare students for the diversity in the populations they will serve, including religion.

Diversity in people is understanding their religious background, because religious practices are often infused into health practices and health beliefs, said Hubbard, who teaches the Healthcare Relationships course, which focuses on understanding diverse backgrounds in healthcare.

A professor addresses a class of nursing students wearing scrubs in a lab with a mannequin in a hospital gown in one of the patient beds
Assistant Professor of Nursing Jeanmarie Koonts (far right) demonstrates health care techniques on one of the mannequins in the Gerald L. Francis Centers Interprofessional Simulation Center.

The course is just one component of the Department of Nursings commitment to equitable healthcare 消消犯, which is incorporated throughout the curriculum.

From birth to death and everywhere in between, the people that are going to be important in a persons wellness or their healing may come from their church body, said Hubbard, who says they also want students to understand the role of the chaplain in a hospital setting. People may have members of a church congregation bring them meals, they may have pastors and friends visit to pray with them. A person’s support network is a social determinant of health.

In December 2025, a faculty team consisting of Pennington, Jeanmarie Koonts, assistant professor of nursing; Molly Green, assistant professor of public health, and Helen Orr, assistant professor of religious studies, was awarded a $60,000 Faith & Health 消消犯 Grant from Interfaith America to promote awareness of how religious diversity impacts healthcare space and medical decision-making.

From left to right: Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society and professor of religious studies; Jeanmarie Koonts, assistant professor of nursing; and Helen Orr, assistant professor of religious studies.

Engineering a multifaith course

Along with nursing, several Elon courses across disciplines integrate multifaith understanding. Orr is co-消消犯 a new course, Engineering A Better World, with Professor of Engineering Sirena Hargrove-Leak on ethical practices in engineering.

Religion is an important category for a lot of people, and it informs not only beliefs, but also everyday practice and ritual, including when people fast, how they dress and how they interact in professional spaces, Orr said. One of our sessions in the course focuses on the value of multi-faith spaces in professional working environments. Those spaces can be beneficial both for religious people and non-religious people, while also encouraging us to think about how environments themselves can be designed to be more inclusive.

Sirena Hargrove-Leak, professor of engineering

Hargrove Leak says the engineering curriculum requires an ethics course and, historically, faculty advised students to choose an ethics course through the Core Curriculum. The downside, she says, is they may not connect what they’re learning to engineering practice. This new course, she says, connects the dots directly.

The work of engineering professionals has the potential to impact people directly; therefore, ethical practice is critically important, said Hargrove-Leak.

Communicating religion

While Orr and Hargrove-Leaks course is new this semester, Professor of Journalism Anthony Hatcher has been studying and 消消犯 the intersection of religion and media for more than 20 years. His course Religion and Media analyzes how the two interact through media coverage of religious issues and themes, religion’s use of television and the Internet and media portrayals of religious people and traditions.

Professor of Journalism and Chair of the Journalism Department Anthony Hatcher

Hatcher began 消消犯 the course in 2003, coming from a longtime interest in the intersection of the two subjects.

It has always sparked my interest how religion intersects not only with a news item, but how it intersects with popular culture, he said. I tell my students, If there is a secular entity of some sort, there is a religious corollary to it.

Finding religious connections in culture is endless for Hatcher, who says he never runs out of material for the course. For one assignment, students must attend a house of worship outside of their own faith and do a research project on the experience. The projects range from more well-known religious practices to lesser-known, like a student who visited a coven of witches in Hillsborough, North Carolina

I make it clear: this is not a religion class. I’m not here to teach you about the scripture, Hatcher said. When they go (to these houses of worship), it’s not just a religious thing. I say, What kind of media did they use? Do they have cameras? Do they have a single microphone? Do they use screens and slides? Is it a majestic organ? What are you seeing there? Did they give you a paper program? Everything that’s media. It gets them thinking about all the mediated ways that they experience religion.

The course is open to all majors, and Hatcher says it can be relevant for all professions.

The subject matter is so important, Hatcher said. It’s like how study abroad is mind-broadening. I think understanding where somebody else comes from, especially if faith is a big part of who they are, is a big deal.

And for Pennington, Elons approach to multifaith learning is an example for others to follow.

We live in a moment where we can clearly see that the faith commitments and religious practices interact with our global politics, our legal systems, our media environments, and our healthcare systems, said Pennington. By attending to multifaith education across academic departments and programs, Elon is leading the way in preparing its students for a rapidly evolving world.


This story is part of a series of stories focusing on 消消犯s Multifaith Strategic Plan.

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Amy Allocco presents keynote address at University of Florida conference, Religion: Conflict and Continuity /u/news/2026/04/13/amy-allocco-presents-keynote-address-at-university-of-florida-conference-religion-conflict-and-continuity/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 13:26:47 +0000 /u/news/?p=1043897 Amy Allocco, professor of religious studies and director of Elons Multifaith Scholars program, presented the keynote for the 6th annual Religion Graduate 消消犯 Association Symposium (RGSA) held at the University of Florida, March 27-28, 2026. Alloccos lecture, A God Feeling in Every Heart: Strategic Innovation Among South Indias Hindu Drummer-Priests, opened the conference on Friday evening.

Amy Allocco, professor of religious studies and director of Elons Multifaith Scholars program, presents the keynote for the 6th annual Religion Graduate 消消犯 Association Symposium (RGSA) held at the University of Florida, March 27-28, 2026

Vasudha Narayanan, distinguished professor in the University of Florida’s Department of Religion, introduced Alloccos keynote. Allocco focused her lecture on pampaikkrar, musicians who play the twin-headed set of drums known as pampai and sing to invoke the deities in diverse Hindu devotional contexts. Drawing on material from her recently completed sabbatical fieldwork project in Tamil-speaking South India, she highlighted the role of pampaikkrar as both musicians and ritual specialists who invoke deities through sound. She argued that these practitioners innovatively adapt their performances in response to changing aesthetic preferences, devotional needs and social contexts while both maintaining credibility and inspiring the god-feeling referenced in the title of her presentation. Allocco also reflected on her own research methods, emphasizing how fieldwork relationships as well as lived traditions shape scholarly questions and, by extension, outcomes.

Following her address, Allocco met with graduate students for an hour-long seminar on methodologies for the study of religion, where emerging researchers had the opportunity to ask questions about ethnography and research ethics as well as their own projects. Participants read two of Alloccos journal articles, which had been selected by conference organizers as the starting point for this seminar.

On Saturday morning, Allocco delivered welcome remarks to inaugurate the full day of paper sessions. The symposium was sponsored by the University of Floridas Department of Religion with support from its Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere.

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A Fighting Chance /u/news/2026/04/03/a-fighting-chance/ Fri, 03 Apr 2026 21:27:08 +0000 /u/news/?p=1043312 A woman smiles while wearing boxing gloves and posing beside a hanging punching bag in a studio setting.

They stood poised with their hands raised, breathing steady, before their fists began to fly. Jab, cross, right hook, left upper cut.

They noticed the sensations in their body as childhood memories raced through their mind, allowing themself to feel every feeling that remained with them from a time when they didnt have a voice. With every punch, they stepped closer to regaining their power, closer to a deeper understanding of their full self.

Danielle Martinelli-Taylor 12 says the physical movement often allows clients to recognize and begin healing younger parts of themselves that were never fully seen or supported. Through the movement, through fighting back against that, they were able to trust themself more.

A licensed professional counselor, Martinelli-Taylor centers her Denver practice, Animo Counseling and Coaching, on healing the whole person. Among the approaches she uses is somatic boxing, a method that connects mind and body to help clients process trauma and strengthen their overall well-being.

Were interconnected beings, she says. Our bodies hold just as much of our story as our minds do, and healing happens when we learn how to listen to both.

A Non-Linear Path

Martinelli-Taylors journey toward counseling wasnt straightforward, but every step helped develop the empathy, critical thinking and global perspective that shapes her work. The Massachusetts native wasnt familiar with Elon before stumbling upon it while touring colleges along the East Coast. She was immediately drawn to its arts and sciences foundation, small class sizes and study abroad program.

She enrolled Early Decision, planning to study education, but soon found that 消消犯 wasnt her passion. She did, however, have a knack for fostering strong one-on-one connections, and she found other ways to build those skills through a strategic communications major and religious studies minor.

Theres a lot of psychology in strategic communications, learning what are peoples needs, what do they want, why do they do what they do. I loved that aspect, Martinell-Taylor says. Then my religious studies minor was just a window to the world of what other people believe, why they believe it and how that directs their decisions, hopes and dreams.

Two women extend their arms forward during a somatic boxing demonstration in an office setting, with a desk and wall art in the background.
Danielle Martinelli-Taylor 12 demonstrates somatic boxing techniques with a patient.

But it was her semester abroad in London that influenced her most, broadening her worldview and clarifying what she did and didnt want to pursue post-graduation. She interned for a fashion supplier on Oxford Street but didnt feel a strong connection to the work. She loved London, though, and wanted to use her communications skills in service of something she cared about deeply.

After graduating, she returned to London for two years, working with an international mission organization that supported churches and other spiritual communities. Martinelli-Taylor spent much of her time connecting with South Asian women, children and teens and found their conversations about life and struggle deeply meaningful. On weekends, she volunteered with a nonprofit fighting human trafficking, a cause that first sparked her interest through an Elon course examining slavery in the Bible, in American history and in modern times. Again and again, she found herself drawn to work that offered support to people during some of the most difficult moments of their lives.

I was hearing peoples trauma, hearing really difficult life journeys and feeling this pull, Martinelli-Taylor says. If people have gone through these really awful things, forced into things they had no control over, how do I step into that world?

That realization ignited Martinelli-Taylors calling to be a counselor. She moved back to the U.S. and earned her masters degree in clinical mental health counseling from Denver Seminary in 2019. Her communications, religious studies and study abroad experience from her time at Elon remained foundational as she forged this new path.

L.D. Russell, senior lecturer emeritus of religious studies at Elon, remembers Martinelli-Taylor as open-minded, eager to learn and deeply committed to helping others. Her unique counseling approach feels like a natural extension of that spirit. One of the truest values of an Elon education, he says, is gaining a clearer sense of how others live and move through the world, and how our own gifts can be used to foster the public good.

The Mind-Body Connection

After obtaining her masters degree, Martinelli-Taylor again used her skills to support human trafficking victims, providing counseling to survivors with complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. She later moved to a group practice, helping clients with a broader range of issues such as anxiety, depression, trauma and grief.

In graduate school, she began to learn how physical movement, education and preventative work can help set clients up for a healthier life and resiliency amid difficult challenges. That idea coupled with her own personal experience with boxing prompted her to try bilateral boxing as a technique with some clients at the group practice. It was starting to help people break out of dissociation and get into their body, Martinelli-Taylor says. We used it as a tool when they felt stuck or overwhelmed with talk therapy.

As she saw the approach resonate with more clients, Martinelli-Taylor set out to develop it further and open her own practice. Drawing on her strategic communications background, she built the foundation for her business while consulting with counselors who use somatic therapies that link breath, body and mental health. In 2024 she founded Animo Counseling and Coaching, where she offers treatments such as Accelerated Resolution Therapy, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing and her own style of somatic boxing therapy.

Animo means mind in Latin, soul and courage in Italian and encouragement in Spanish. The practice reflects that intentionality, that purposefulness, she says. It represents the embodiment of the brain and bodys role in learning about yourself.

Our bodies hold just as much of our story as our minds do, and healing happens when we learn how to listen to both. Danielle Martinelli-Taylor ’12

Martinelli-Taylor first teaches her clients the basics of non-contact boxing, using the bilateral movements of boxing but no sparring, just hitting boxing gloves to mitts as the whole body engages. She focuses on proper form and breathwork, guiding clients to concentrate on each motion. The practice becomes a type of moving meditation, stimulating both sides of the body and both hemispheres of the brain.

For many clients, the approach offers another avenue for healing, especially for those who may not feel ready to talk through difficult experiences right away. By focusing on the rhythm of movement and breath, clients begin to notice what their bodies and minds are holding, and shift it out.

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Once clients feel comfortable with the technique, she introduces strategies for building courage, managing stress and emotions, and processing difficult memories. The approach encourages people to tune in to the physical sensations that often accompany mental health struggles, opening the door to more holistic healing. Movement and breathwork, Martinelli-Taylor says, can help move through distress, regulate mood and ground the body to allow clients to face and work through deeper challenges.

In addition to continuing to grow her practice, Martinelli-Taylor hopes to conduct larger studies on the impact of somatic boxing on mental health. And while she is there to support her clients in the ring when they need it, she doesnt expect them to rely on a coach forever. Her goal is to help people build the awareness and tools to continue the work on their own to trust their bodies, their instincts and their capacity to heal.

I want them to feel like theyre equipped to learn and grow, Martinelli-Taylor says. They can take this work, try it out in the world and know that theyre resilient.

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In panel discussion, Elon faculty offer religious and political insight on US-Iran conflict /u/news/2026/03/12/in-panel-discussion-elon-faculty-offer-religious-and-political-insight-on-us-iran-conflict/ Thu, 12 Mar 2026 20:02:36 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041473 消消犯 faculty from the Department of Political Science and Public Policy and the Department of Religious Studies gathered with students in East Neighborhood Commons on March 10 for a panel discussion about the U.S.-Iran conflict.The war began on Feb. 28 with the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a joint U.S.-Israeli strike. Since then, the conflict has intensified.

During the panel, moderated by Jason Kirk, professor of political science and policy studies, each professor used their academic research to explain the hows, whys and whats of the war.

We are in a very different media and political economy compared to a generation ago,” said Kirk, “and that will be the deciding factor of how we view and remember this conflict.”

A presenter gestures toward a projected slide titled Iranian Leaders Death Leaves a Power Vacuum while speaking to an audience seated in a lecture hall.
Baris Kesgin, associate professor of political science and public policy, explains the Iranian political system during a panel discussion on March 10, 2026.

Baris Kesgin, associate professor of political science and public policy, explained the Iranian political system in which religious authority and democratic practices play a part in governing society. Using graphs that outlined the political hierarchy, Kesgin emphasized the seriousness of the death of Irans Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and how Iran selected their new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei.

Iran is not completely a theocracy and not essentially a democracy, Kesgin said.

A speaker stands at a podium with an 消消犯 sign, addressing an audience during a campus discussion event.
Jason Kirk, professor of political science and policy studies, moderates a panel discussion on the U.S.-Iran war on March 10, 2026.

Thomas Kerr, assistant 消消犯 professor of political science and public policy, discussed the U.S. military, noting that, although the United States has the largest military in the world, it does not have unlimited resources. Regardless, Kerr explained, even with fewer available resources to defend other bases, the United States has proven in previous conflicts to beat Chinese war technology that is being used by Iran currently.

The more we [the United States] dedicate our resources in Iran, means that less resources that we can guarantee towards our other bases in, for example, Ukraine and Taiwan, Kerr said.

Chelsea Bediako, a political science & international and global studies major, attended the panel to learn more about the conflict outside of what she was seeing in the news media.

I am the type of person who information comforts me, for example, having a grasp on whats going on and having less uncertainty makes me more comfortable, so I wanted to separate fact from speculation, Bediako said.

Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies and the Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and Ariela Marcus-Sells, associate professor of religious studies during a panel discussion on the US-Iran war on March 10, 2026.

Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies and the Lori and Eric Sklut professor in Jewish studies, spoke to the religious context of the war. He explained that although it is difficult to justify any war due to the human consequences, some ethicists use the criteria of the Just War Theory. This theory argues that for a war to be considered just, it must be a last resort (following unsuccessful non-violent solutions), have a just cause, must be produced from a valid authority, have a probable success, use only necessary force and must be fought fairly with minimal harm to non-combatants.

Claussen explained that the vast majority of the Israeli community supports this war, as they see Iran as an existential threat. In the U.S., Professor of Political Science and Public Policy Jason Husser noted that the American people are opposed, with recent polling showing 56% being against the war. Husser explained that these numbers can and will fluctuate as the conflict progresses, with the majority of Americans in the polls being against boots on the ground.

 A large audience of students fills a bright, modern lecture hall while a panel of speakers sits at the front during a public discussion event.
A panel discussion on the US-Iran war on March 10, 2026 in East Neighborhood Commons.

Ariela Marcus-Sells, associate professor of religious studies, covered the political and religious motives behind this conflict, including the unique societal view that Islam and, therefore, Iran is a threat to Western society. Marcus-Sells argued this is not a new concept, describing how in the 18th century, the idea of orientalism came from Western leaders of Europe seeing themselves as descendants of greater society, in comparison to the East, including people who followed Islam. This belief only grew over the years with the creation of America, the misconception of terrorists being associated with Muslims and media coverage of Islamic religious conservatism as something strange and oppressive.

消消犯 were also able to ask questions of the panel. Mariama Jalloh, a public health major, came to the panel to listen to Elons faculty members opinions about the conflict and hear an academic perspective that was new to her

I really appreciated Dr. Marcus-Sells and Dr. Kesgin explaining the landscape of the situation, both religiously and politically, Jalloh said. This panel gave students a platform to ask deeper questions that you wouldnt hear on social media or the internet.

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Elon faculty to host a panel discussion on the US-Iran Conflict /u/news/2026/03/06/elon-faculty-to-host-a-panel-discussion-on-the-us-iran-conflict/ Fri, 06 Mar 2026 20:12:00 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041031 Elon faculty will host a panel on Tuesday, March 10 at 4:30 p.m. discussing the unfolding situation between the United States and Iran. Faculty from different disciplines will gather in East Neighborhood Commons (Forum 102), tocontextualize recent developments in the U.S.-Iran conflict for the campus community.

Participating faculty will beAriela Marcus-Sells,Baris Kesgin, Geoffrey Claussen, Jason Husser, and Tom Kerr, with Jason Kirk moderating.

消消犯, faculty, and staff are encouraged to attend.

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