User:Enheduanna13/sandbox

Ellen Muehlberger is an American scholar of Christianity and late antiquity, currently associate professor of Near Eastern Studies and History at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, with appointments in Classical Studies and the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies.

Until 2009 Muehlberger was a professor of Religious Studies at DePauw University, and has taught at the University of Michigan since then. Her scholarship focuses on the period of 300 C.E. to 700 C.E., and examines specifically "rhetorical and historiographical methods Christians adopted as Christian culture shifted from being in the minority to being dominant in the later Roman Empire." Her scholarship has received press coverage in the University of Michigan News, as has her political activism.

Scholarship and Public Engagement
Muehlberger, regarded as an expert on the late antique religious imagination, is the author of Angels in Late Ancient Christianity (Oxford University Press, 2013), which was reviewed widely, notably in Bryn Mawr Classical Review, Journal of Theological Studies, American Historical Review, Journal of Early Christian Studies, Horizons, and Marginalia Review of Books. Muehlberger is the author of numerous scholarly articles and chapters of collected volumes, published alongside figures such as Moulie Vidas, Catherine Chin, David Brakke (who has also published on Shenoute), As an authority on early Christianity, Muehlberger has been commissioned to edit a volume of The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings, and will be publishing a further study, The Moment of Reckoning: Imagined Death and Its Consequences in Late Antiquity with Oxford University Press. Muehlberger lectures internationally and throughout the United States, as well as a contributor to the Marginalia Review of Books. In Marginalia, she has written on the "architecture of knowledge" in Late Antiquity,, Muehlberger sits on the editorial boards of Studies of Late Antiquity, Bryn Mawr Classical Review, Early Christianity in the Context of Antiquity, and Cambridge Editions of Early Christian Writings.

Teaching
At the University of Michigan, Muehlberger teaches introductory undergraduate courses on Christianity, advanced undergraduate and graduate courses on Christianity in late antiquity, Gnosticism, asceticism, and theories of historiography, as well as language courses for undergraduates and graduates in Greek, Coptic, and Syriac.

Awards and Honors
She was a Charles A. Ryskamp Research Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies from 2014-2015. In 2015 she received the Class of 1923 Memorial Teaching Award at the University of Michigan. She is currently a NEH fellow. . In 2017 she was named by ACLS as Emerging Themes and Methods of Humanities Research.