Center for Research on Global Catholicism
The Center for Research on Global Catholicism (CRGC) at Â鶹´«Ã½ supports scholarship at the nexus of Catholicism and culture, providing robust programming that promotes interdisciplinary research, collaboration, and methodological innovation.
In this video, three members of the CRGC leadership team discuss the center, its mission, and why SLU is an ideal place to do this research.
CRGC Fellows
The Center for Research on Global Catholicism at Â鶹´«Ã½ is pleased to announce the launch of its inaugural Seminar Fellowship Program for 2024-2025 on the theme "New Directions in Research on Global Catholicism: Mobilities, Migrations, Circulations."
Postdoctoral Research Fellows
The Center for Research on Global Catholicism at Â鶹´«Ã½ supports two postdoctoral research fellows. Postdoctoral research fellows pursue their own research projects and assist with CRGC programming for two-year terms.
Anna Katharina Rudolph (Ph.D., Medieval History, University of California, Santa Barbara) is a postdoctoral research fellow for the Center for Research on Global Catholicism at Â鶹´«Ã½. Her research is driven by questions of how the sacred intersects with the political to define women's roles over time and across space. She is currently spearheading the St. Louis Catholic Archives Collective, an initiative partnering the CRGC with archivists at multiple independent local women's archives to increase the visibility and accessibility of their collections. As a historian of medieval women's history, her research interests include the intersection of gender and sanctity, the cult of the saints, queenship, and monasticism. Rudolph's current book project, "Dynamics of Women's Sanctity from Medieval to Modernity, Rewriting History, Hagiography, and the Myth of the French Nation," uses the global "afterlife" of the Frankish queen-saint Radegund of Poitiers (520-587), to investigate the complex relationship between hagiography, gender and the construction of national identities.
Our Mission
Our mission is to make Â鶹´«Ã½ an internationally-recognized hub for research on global Catholicism. The Center for Research on Global Catholicism supports scholarship on the ways and means by which Catholicism migrated across time and space to become a global religion, entangled with imperial ambitions, in excess of official intentions, mobilized by material objects, affective relationships, politics, theologies, epidemics and more.
The objectives of the Center for Research on Global Catholicism include:
- Capitalizing on scholarly expertise at SLU and in St. Louis to advance knowledge and understanding of global Catholicism
- Facilitating connections between local archives and research scholars
- Supporting scholars working in the field of global Catholicism by providing resources, community, and opportunities for collaboration
The Center for Research on Global Catholicism is a Big Idea project sponsored by the Research Growth Fund at SLU. The first Big Idea grounded in the Humanities, the CRGC brings together three key components of SLU’s Jesuit history and mission: a legacy of global engagement, a commitment to rigorous academic inquiry and a focus on social justice.
Giving to the CRGC supports our lecture and book symposium series, conferences, seminar fellows program and more.
Center for Research on Global Catholicism Team
Mary Dunn, Ph.D.
Director, Center for Research on Global Catholicism
Associate professor, Theological studies
Charles Parker, Ph.D.
Interim director, Center for Research on Global Catholicism
Professor, Department of History
Paul Lynch, Ph.D.
Associate professor, Department of English
Caitlan Stamm
University archivist, Assistant professor
Mary Dunn, Ph.D.
Associate professor, Theological studies
Cathleen Fleck, Ph.D.
Professor, Art History
Kate Moran, Ph.D.
Associate professor, American Studies
Charles Parker, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of History
David Suwalsky, S.J.
Vice president of mission and identity
Donna LaVoie
Dean of the College for Arts and Sciences
- Jennifer Nutefall (Dean of libraries and museums)
- Heidi Ardizzone (American studies)
- Jeff Bishop (Philosophy)
- Sam Conedera S.J. (History)
- Ron Crown (Pius Library)
- Emily Dumler-Winckler (Theological studies)
- Chris Ealham (Humanities, Madrid)
- Jamie Emery (Pius Library)
- Francisco J. GarcÃa-Serrano Nebras (Humanities, Madrid)
- Claire Gilbert (History)
- Jay Hammond (Theological studies)
- Kevin Ingram (Humanities, Madrid)
- Alberto de Mingo Kaminouchi (Humanities, Madrid)
- Grant Kaplan (Theological studies)
- Atria Larson (Theological studies)
- Nick Lewis (History)
- Petruta Lipan (University Museums)
- Jennifer J. Lowe (Rare Books Room)
- Paul Lynch (English)
- Filippo Marsilli (History)
- Colleen McCluskey (Philosophy)
- David Meconi (Catholic Studies),
- David Miros (Director, Jesuit Archives and Research Center)
- Melanie Mitchell (Humanities, Madrid)
- Fabien Montcher (History)
- Ana Montero (LLC)
- Almudena Olondo (Humanities, Madrid)
- Olga Muñoz (Spanish, Madrid)
- Gregory Pass (Vatican Film Library)
- Jen Popiel (History)
- Scott Ragland (Philosophy)
- Fabiola MartÃnez RodrÃguez (Fine and performing arts, Madrid)
- Angela Smart (Languages, literatures and cultures)
- Sergio Rosell (Humanities, Madrid)
- Mark Ruff (History)
- Steven Schoenig (History)
- Cynthia Stollhans (Fine and performing arts)
- Eleonore Stump (Philosophy)
- Laura Tedesco (Political science, Madrid)
- Curra Vericat (Fine and performing arts, Madrid)
- Taylor West (Humanities, Madrid)