Pitts Theology Library Student Research Award Winner: Emily-Elizabeth Castelloe

Emily-Elizabeth Castelloe, MDiv 2023

Pitts is excited to announce that this year’s recipient of the Pitts Theology Library Student Research Award is graduating MDiv student Emily-Elizabeth Castelloe. This award was based on Castelloe’s MDiv thesis, “Christians in the Making: Childhood Education for Conversion, Profession, and Membership in the Early American Methodist Movement (1738-1864).” The work explores written expressions of early American Methodist theology and the resulting liturgical practice around initiation and participation of children in the church. Castelloe’s scholarship draws heavily on the works of the early founders of the Methodist church, in both England and America, many of which are rare and have often gone unexplored by generations of scholars and students.

As part of this award, each year Pitts names an item from its world-renowned rare book collection in honor of the recipient. This item is selected by the library director, in consideration of the student’s research work and vocational interests. This year, Pitts has named its first edition of an important work from F. G. Hibbard (1811-1895), Christian Baptism: Its Mode, Obligation, Import, and Relative Order, printed in New York in 1841, in honor of Castelloe. In her thesis, Castelloe notes that Hibbard’s work “became the authoritative standard concerning the role of Christian nurture toward faith in the Methodist Episcopal Church” (Castelloe, 23). She uses this work to characterize how 19th century theological positions translated into liturgy and the education of children.

The Pitts Theology Library Research Award, established in 2021, is given annually to a Candler student who demonstrates creativity in research, maturity in theological thought, and excellence in using library resources to mount an argument, all demonstrated through a submitted research project. Applicants submit a single research paper or project, which should be a work completed for Candler coursework in the current academic year. Submissions are judged blindly by a Pitts committee, and the award is announced at the Candler Honors Day Ceremony. For more details, visit https://pitts.emory.edu/about/researchaward/.

Pitts is committed to supporting student research, not only by providing the resources necessary for research, but also the instruction and reference services to support students, as well as opportunities to generate original research based on its collections. We congratulate Emily-Elizabeth on this remarkable project and a stellar career at Candler, and we look forward to watching her success in future endeavors.

Chris RayAlexander in suit coat and newsboy cap standing in a library

Pitts Theology Library Student Research Award Winner: Chris RayAlexander

Pitts Theology Library congratulates Candler MDiv student Chris RayAlexander as the recipient of the annual Pitts Theology Library Student Research Award! Chris was selected for his submitted essay, “Power up for Grabs: The Rod of Iron, Muscular Christianity, and Formal Whiteness.” The Pitts award committee judged this essay to be the best demonstration of creativity in research, maturity in theological thought, and excellence in using library resources to mount an argument amongst the many submissions. Chris’ essay examines the Biblical language “rod of iron,” tracing its development from its OT and NT literary contexts, to its interpretation in English translations of the 17th and 18th centuries, through its use in the recent “Christian patriot” rhetoric of Hyung Jin Sean Moon. In the essay, Chris draws on Hebrew Bible and New Testament scholarship, reception history, and contemporary philosophy, and he makes expert use of items in Pitts Special Collections.

To celebrate the recipient each year, Pitts selects one of its rare books to name in the winner’s honor. To match the research interests reflected in Chris’ essay, Pitts has named in his honor the Pitts copy of Lewis Mayer’s 1806 Bonaparte the Emperor of the French (1769-1821) (1806 MAYE:1). Chris uses this tract in his analysis to show the shift in the understanding of the “rod of iron” language in the early 19th century. 

An early owner’s inscription, dated June 1807, appears opposite the title page, identifying Napoleon Bonaparte as ‘the devil’s heir at law.

Pitts is pleased to offer this award in recognition of the creative scholarship that happens in classes each semester at Candler. We offer our congratulations to Chris for his creative and innovative scholarship. To read more about the award and the selection criteria, visit pitts.emory.edu/researchaward. To read Chris’ essay, visit this link! Congratulations, Chris!

Pitts Theology Library Inaugural Student Research Award Winner: Brianna Alexis Heath

Pitts Theology Library congratulates Candler MTS student Brianna Alexis Heath as the recipient of the inaugural Pitts Theology Library Student Research Award! This award acknowledges her submitted essay, “Frenzied H(e)avens: African American Post Exilic Realities in J’Sun Howard’s ‘aMoratorium.’” The award committee judged this essay to be the best demonstration of creativity in research, maturity in theological thought, and excellence in using library resources to mount an argument amongst the many submissions. In the essay, Brianna asks the question, “How does the reclamation of the body through dance and movement create space for African Americans’ post exilic realities?” Following scholars who have suggested that there is no post exilic narrative to be found in written historical accounts or cultural artifacts such as Negro spirituals, Brianna looks to dance, particularly J’Sun Howard’s aMoratorium, to explore the African American exilic and post-exilic reality. 

To celebrate the recipient each year, Pitts selects one of its rare books to name in the winner’s honor. To match the research interests reflected in Brianna’s essay, Pitts has selected the first edition of James Weldon Johnson’s The Book of American Negro Spirituals (New York: Viking Press, 1925). The book, part of Pitts’ world-renowned hymnody collection, contains many of the songs that Brianna uses in her analysis, such as “Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel.” The book, which is kept in Pitts’ Special Collections stacks, will be accessible to scholars with a note marking Brianna’s achievement.

Pitts is pleased to offer this award in recognition of the creative scholarship that happens in classes each semester at Candler. We offer our congratulations to Brianna for her hard work. To read more about the award and the selection criteria, visit pitts.emory.edu/researchaward. To read Brianna’s essay, visit this link!