Our Team

Tiffany Puett, Executive Director

Tiffany (she/they) is a scholar of American religions and a community educator who has been writing, researching, and teaching for over 20 years. In 2015, she founded IDCL to research, document, and foster conversations about the rich diversity of Texas. She also teaches in the Department of Religious Studies at St. Edward’s University. She holds a PhD in Religious Studies from the University of Waterloo and a master’s degree in Ethics from Boston University. Her work is inspired by the rich diversity of Texas, the power of storytelling, and her commitment to mutual liberation. She lives in Austin with her spouse, two lovely children, and two energetic dogs.


Elizabeth M. Melton, Public Engagement Director

Elizabeth (she/her) is a scholar and playwright whose work is dedicated to understanding race and identity in Texas. She combines critical ethnography with performance methods to reach audiences that would not typically encounter academic research. Her anti-racist play, Unpacking Longview, uses oral history performance, storytelling, and the trope of the fool to address her legacies of whiteness and the process of public school desegregation in her East Texas hometown. She holds a Ph.D. in Communication from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an M.A. in Performance Studies from Texas A&M University. In her spare time, she enjoys hiking the Blue Ridge Mountains with her partner and their pet beagle.


Van Wagner, Community Archive Director

Van (they/them) is a graduate of Yale Divinity School with an MA in Religion, concentrated in History of Christianity. They received their BA in Religion from Trinity University in San Antonio. Van has experience with both ethnographic interviewing and oral history archival work, each with relevance to religion, culture, and historic events. Their research interests include contemporary conservative evangelicalism in the US as well as its intersections with civic religion and conservative political engagement. In their free time, Van enjoys baking, playing tabletop RPGs, and writing fiction.


Eleonora Anedda, Oral Historian and Curriculum Specialist

Eleonora (she/her) holds an MA in Oral History from Columbia University, and came to this field from a Gender and Sexuality Studies background. She was born and raised in Sardinia, Italy and earned her BA in Humanities from the Università deli Studi di Cagliari and an MA in Queer History from Goldsmiths College, University of London. She has served as a research assistant for the Picture of the Homeless Oral History Project. And she founded Lesbismo Italiano, an oral history project that aims at reconstructing how Italian women with same-sex desires lived in the 20th century. When she isn’t glued to her computer she enjoys taking care of her twelve orchids, eating tagliatelle, swimming, and going for long walks with her dog.


Yuying Wu, Oral History Fellow

Yuying Wu is a multimedia content creator with a passion for storytelling and creative expression. She is an oral history master’s student at Columbia University and has previously earned a double degree in Communications and Economics from UCLA. She is interested in connecting personal narratives with broader social science disciplines to analyze history and society, especially during the pandemic era.


Moureen Kaki, Oral History Fellow

Moureen (she/her) is a Palestinian community organizer and anthropologist born and raised in San Antonio, Texas. She earned her B.A. in Anthropology from the University of Texas at San Antonio, where she is currently continuing to pursue anthropology as a Master’s student. Her research interests were born of her personal experiences—living in Palestine and advocating for Palestinian liberation in the U.S. Her research interests include Christian Zionism in the U.S. and the movement’s relationship to Palestine. In her spare time, Moureen loves to take care of her three cats and dog, as well as cook, garden, and play speed chess.