Camille Angelo

Camille Angelo is currently a doctoral candidate at Yale University in the Department of Religious Studies. Her work examines the body and sexuality in late antique Christian cultural discourse using an interdisciplinary approach drawn from art history, archaeology, social history, and gender and sexuality studies. Currently, she is analyzing the archaeological remains of several early Christian sites in the eastern Mediterranean to elucidate patterns of ritual movement and embodied worship in late antiquity. Camille is a field archaeologist and has excavated in the eastern Mediterranean and the Caucasus.  In 2018, she launched the Late Antiquity Modeling Project (LAMP), a digital humanities collective dedicated to creating three-dimensional reconstructions of late antique ritual spaces. The same year, Camille received a grant from the DigitalGlobe Foundation and was appointed to the Society of Biblical Literature’s Graduate Student Advisory Board. She is also a graduate associate at the Center for the Study of Material and Visual Cultures of Religion at Yale University.