Lucinda E.G. Ramberg
· Associate ProfessorCornell University · Religious Studies
Active 2006–2025
About
Lucinda E.G. Ramberg is an associate professor in the Religious Studies Program at Cornell University. She is a medical and sociocultural anthropologist and interdisciplinary scholar whose work intersects feminist, postcolonial, and queer theories; religion and secularism; medicine and the body; and South Asia. Her research projects in South India and the United States focus on the politics of sexuality, gender, and religion, with particular attention to the body as an artifact of culture and power in relation to sexual subjectivity, social transformation, and citizenship projects. Ramberg's notable contributions include her ethnographic work on contemporary practices such as the devotion of South Indian devadasis, which she explores in her book 'Given to the Goddess: South Indian Devadasis and the Sexuality of Religion.' Her research examines what constitutes religion and the nature of marriage through the lens of these practices. She has also studied sexual risk and transsexual medicine in the US, as well as sacred prostitution and Dalit conversion to Buddhism in South India. Her second major project investigates the revival of Buddhism among Dalits in South India, focusing on religious conversion, caste radicalism, social transformation, and sexual politics. Ramberg's work has been recognized with several awards, including the Michelle Rosaldo best first book prize in Feminist Anthropology, the Ruth Benedict prize, and the Clifford Geertz Prize for best book in the anthropology of religion.
Research topics
- Sociology
- Political Science
- Law
- Gender studies
- Computer Science
- History
- Genealogy
- Anthropology
- Religious studies
- Media studies
Selected publications
4 Dalit Futures and Sexual Modernity in South India
SUNY Press eBooks · 2025-04-07
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingDalit Futures and Sexual Modernity in South India
State University of New York Press eBooks · 2025-03-27
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingKinship and Kinmaking Otherwise
2024-04-12
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingGLQ A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies · 2024-04-01 · 2 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingAfter studying feminist ethics and liberation theology in seminary in the 1980s, I joined a reading group with like-minded women. We called ourselves “the seminary lesbians under theological stress.” In 1991 we marched in San Francisco Pride behind a big, hand-painted banner. Sporting lacy bras, we handed out hot-pink stickers to a queer public thrilled by our mash-up of naughty sex and illicit religion. The stickers read: “The goddess loves you. xo, The SLUTS.” Campy provocation or queer blessing? We were going for both! Roars of delight and tears of relief flowed from among the onlooking crowd as we passed. At that point, the relationship between LGBT studies and religious studies was limited to mutual exile. Queers are bad for religion; religion is bad for queers. To be sure, some worked toward inclusion. This was almost always a question of producing some form of LGBT respectability—what we today would call homonormativity—and virtually never one of queering religion. Thinking queerness and religion together, much less claiming both, remains a conundrum.My own efforts to remain faithful to the possibilities of this conundrum led me to become an anthropologist and to move away from the hegemonic terrains of Christianity and the United States. An encounter with a South Indian goddess opened up new ways of feeling and thinking through, in between, and against the categories of sexuality and religion. The devi, or goddess, Yellamma, whose devotees in Karnataka, South India, I have been in conversation with for twenty-five years, is herself a conundrum—for scholars of religion as well as for her devotees. Her priests are female and male sexed women whose initiations are conducted as rites of marriage. They are called jogatis and jogappas, or devadasis, and they call this goddess their husband and mother. Transformations in gender and sexuality are a mode and medium of her power. As one priest put it to me, “Yellamma is not simple, she makes men into women.” Saying “she came to me in a dream and called me to her temple,” women withdraw from sexual relations with their husbands and leave untenable marriages. They take the path of divine service out of gendered kin obligations, which are otherwise extremely difficult to escape in this rural context where endogamous relations remain the most powerful arbiter of social belonging. Other women exchange saris for dhotis and turbans, renounce the kin obligations conventionally assigned to women, and take up men's work in Yellamma's name. At her festivals, jogappas—male sexed women whom the goddess has claimed—wrap saris, conduct rites, bestow blessings, play sacred instruments, dance, and sing in her name. Yellamma's pujaris (priests) are widely understood to embody illicit sexuality; their dedication is often described as an induction into prostitution under the “cover of false religion.” Following Yellamma's women as they conducted rites commonly framed as “empty” led me to ponder a question: whose ways of talking to god(s) can count as religion? Illicit sexual personhood—I was learning, very far away from any queer metropole—indexes religious illegitimacy. Religious propriety indexes sexual propriety. These formulas apply to everyday possibilities of recognition as well as scholarly treatments of both queerness and religiosity. As long as Abrahamic and Brahmanical patriarchal religions are ascendant, being loved by the goddess might indeed make you queer(er).Scholars laboring in the relatively untrammeled terrain between queer studies and religious studies have long lamented the ways these fields have foreclosed possibilities of cross-fertilization. Within queer theory, sexuality is typically conceived in secular terms as an effect of discursive, psychic, and somatic flows or structures. Most scholars of religion view their object of study through a straight lens. In reflecting on why people are quick to refuse the idea that the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence are nuns—as they identified themselves to her in her research with them—Melissa Wilcox (2019: 18) has proposed a formula: Sex negates “true” religion;Queerness and transness equal sex;Therefore, queerness and transness negate “true” religion.Drag queens can't be real nuns, and prostitutes can't be real priests, or so the logic goes. The question becomes, how might our scholarly projects open themselves up to the mutual entanglements of religiosity and sexuality? A variety of approaches have been taken up by scholars oriented by and toward both sex and god(s). Riffing on Omar Kasmani's thoughtful typology in Queer Companions (155–59), I would suggest three main pathways: explorations of the religiosity of queerness, elaborations of the queerness of religion, and queer thea/ologies.Elaborations of the religiosity of queerness have taken the ritual of Pride, the space of the BDSM dungeon or dyke bar, innovations in same-sex weddings, and sex rites as sites in which the cosmic, ethical, and soteriological functions of queer practices might be elaborated through the categories of religious studies. Considerations of the queerness of religion work through queer categories and methods to shed light on the perversity of religion, its desire for the ecstasies and suffering of the body. Wilcox's study of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence might be characterized in this light as a study of sexy religion against propriety. In a similar vein, I have suggested we investigate the “sexuality of religion,” in that “all rites and religions have sexuality, they mobilize and organize sexual economies, distributions of fertility, the limits and possibilities of public pleasures, and the shape of our desires” (Ramberg 2014: 222). Queer Thea/ologies bring a queer lens to canonical sacred texts, revising and reclaiming religious orthodoxies for the LGBTQ faithful.Three recently published books, drawing from ethnographic archives compiled in the global South, offer some novel ways to take up improper objects and pursue impertinent methods between the problem spaces carved out by the categories religion and queerness. In their own way, each builds on and goes beyond the three main pathways I have outlined above. Notably, writing from Pakistan, the Dominican Republic, and India, these anthropologists fold insights drawn from critical race, decolonial, postcolonial, and post-secular theories forged in the global South. These insights reconfigure what it might mean to queer religion. Kasmani advances what he calls “reading queer religiously” (28, 159). Ana-Maurine Lara's approach might be characterized as Black: queer reading/writing/ritual. Saria makes a cut in the space between religiosity and queerness in order to recast the question of social reproduction. To elaborate in greater detail their contributions to the field of queer/religion, I offer brief summaries of these monographs.Drawing on extensive fieldwork at the most significant site of Sufi pilgrimage in Pakistan, Kasmani extends ethnographic meditations on relations between fakirs and saints. In his monograph Queer Companions: Religion, Public Intimacy, and Saintly Affects in Pakistan, he takes these relations as generative grounds for queer questions about intimacy and temporality. Each chapter centers a particular site within the pilgrimage complex—grove, shrine, courtyard, lodge, and graveyard—and his conversations and encounters with one or two fakirs or healers. These pairings allow Kasmani to elaborate the myriad ways the queer companionship of saints unfolds across the unstraight lives of fakirs as well as how their healing practices are emplaced and place making. That is, the organization of the book attends to the temporal and spatial possibilities of saintly intimacies.One of his key interlocutors describes herself as “in the line of fakiri” (8), referring in particular to the thirteenth-century antinomian saint Lal Shahbaz Qalandar whose tomb this site surrounds. Thinking with Sara Ahmed (2006), Kasmani takes lines of orientation as a key hermeneutic and unfolds the “unstraight affordancies” and “obstancies” (15–16) that fakiri intimacies make available. Being “in the line” of Lal puts this woman, “unlike other women” (8), out of step with expectations typically upheld for wives, mothers, and daughters. In her case, she managed her husband's desire that she leave the shrine and return to their domestic life by recourse to her commitment to Lal. She could not take leave of the saint without his permission. Becoming close to saints opens up intimacies afforded fakirs but not other women.In attending to the nonreproductive, nonheterosexual intimacies and temporalities surrounding Lal, Kasmani asks queer questions of religion. Setting aside more predictable objects of queer inquiry, such as sexual identity and acts, he frames his project as “reading queer religiously.” Rather than “Islamizing queer or queering Islam,” Kasmani brings both categories into productive crisis, “troubling religion as a nondefinable, Eurocentric, and colonialist category” and imagining queerness beyond rights, cities, secularity, and Europe (28). What are we looking for when we are looking through a queer lens? Kasmani answers this question in a particularly innovative fashion. For him, queerness is not so much a question of sexuality as an object of study. It serves instead as hermeneutic, a mode of reading. “It follows that fakir lives in this book are not confirmations of queer presence elsewhere but orientations in and of themselves” (28). These non-straight orientations unfolding around a Sufi shrine provincialize the secularity of sex and the propriety of Islam.Kasmani warns against the limits of recuperative readings of religion as being queerer than we have been taught. Such quests for lost ancestors and origins risk what he terms “queer jacketing” of religion. Rather than uncovering Sufism as the queer space within Islam, Kasmani is interested in “reading queerness religiously.” That is, Kasmani eschews the pathways of queering religion or religioning queerness as methods that risk re-stabilizing the categories religion and queerness. Further nuancing the question of how to pose the relation between the categories queer and religion, Kasmani turns to an Urdu concept: suhbet. This term bears a range of meanings, he explains, from conversation to auspicious encounter to sexual congress. It signals an intimate abiding with. “How, then, might we imagine a suhbet between queer studies and the study of religion?” he writes (156). Within a suhbet—coming together and staying with—between religious and queer studies, “each might alter the other's forms of knowing,” he suggests (156). More concretely, by taking nonurban, non-secular spaces in the global South as generative sites for queer concepts and methods, he embraces an improper object of queer studies. Further, in characterizing this promiscuous religious site—“Sufi by renown, Shivaite in heritage, and increasingly Shi'i in following” (3)—as manifesting nothing more than the everyday religious plurality of Pakistan, he disrupts nationalist Shi'i assertions and concepts of faithfulness as necessarily singular. In reading queerness religiously, this ethnography unsettles the epistemological foundations of both queer and religious studies, leaving the reader to contemplate unorthodox intimacies between saints and fakirs, religionists and queer scholars, shrines in the global South and gayborhoods in the global North.In the wake of decades of participatory ethnography in the Dominican Republic, Ana-Maurine Lara has written a poetic monograph that advances a set of arguments about the place of criollo traditions in broad struggles for justice and freedom. But this is not just a book that advances arguments; it takes the form of a ceremony. In Queer Freedom: Black Sovereignty, Lara invites her readers to enter shared “body-lands, water-memories, and altars-puntos” that makes decolonial queer Black conviviality possible. She invites us to receive her work as an ofrenda (offering) in service of healing and thriving. Her rhetorical modes of address are drawn from Afro-descendant aesthetics and form: “As with jazz, bomba, atables, and krik?krak!, this is a call and response. ‘Queer freedom: Black sovereignty’ is the call” (14). Her formulation, “queer freedom: Black sovereignty,” insists on the inextricability of decolonial and emancipatory projects across sexuality, race, gender, and Indigeneity.This is a book that performs its interventions. It is divided into chapters that enact a dimension of criollo ritual observance. In the table of contents where a reader would expect an introduction and conclusion, instead they find “opening ceremony” and “closing ceremony.” The first element on the first page of the “opening ceremony” is explained in the first footnote, which precedes the main text. She writes, This drawing is a vêvé, a landing point for the misterios, the energies present within these pages who will traverse this ofrenda along with us. . . . As roadways, vêvé remind us to take note of our physical and emotional presence within ceremonial time and space. . . . Footnotes in this text are also vêvés. Here, they are symbolic doorways, placeholders, and landing points signaling where the reader might need to go to know more, to contemplate, to connect. (1)In making a ceremony of a book, Lara might be said to be queering the scholarly monograph. Certainly, she moves beyond the secular presumptions and subject/object relations governing most scholarly writing. Readers and misterios alike are called into this book. Queerness here is a question of sexual orientation and identity, but also a mode of playful/serious reading that draws on both African American traditions of “reading” (calling out) together with Afro-descendant religious modes of “reading” your head (calling in). When a servidora/priest “reads your head,” she is discerning what misterios you belong to as well as your intentions and relations in the ceremony. Rather than take Afro-descendant religion as her object of observation, Lara makes of it a source of her hermeneutics and mode of writing, hence Black: queer reading/writing/ritual. Lara moves beyond queering religion or religioning queer in composing an ethnography of queer: Black ritual and resistance that is itself a ceremonial enactment and an offering.Throughout, Lara is concerned with the ongoing violence of Christian coloniality, logics of purity, blood quantum, and plantation slavery as well as the continuities of ritual and “deep knowledge” (127) that subvert, rupture, and displace the hegemony of ethnonationalist Catholicism. She takes her readers on an intimate journey through ceremonies and conversations with priests, priestesses, keepers of altars-puntos, and initiates. Many of these interlocutors do not directly discuss their relationship to misterios whom they serve, and whose altars-puntos they keep. These practices are stigmatized as “witchcraft” and “demonology” by virtually all Protestants and some Catholics. Lara is attentive to the forms of opacity produced by this politics of religion, both in terms of what kinds of religious publics are possible as well as the limits of ethnographic transparency. Indeed, she demonstrates a rigorous commitment to critiquing the logics of purity wherever they may turn up. Her evocative and layered descriptions of criollo practices open the reader up to possibilities for queer, Black, and Indigenous preservation and thriving. As an exercise in decolonial anthropology, this book calls the reader into a space in which colonial knowledge and power structures are contested, decentered, and overcome by deeper and older forms of being, conjuring, and gathering.Vaibhav Saria's compelling, generous, and raw ethnography of hijra lives, loves, and worlds in rural Odisha, Hijras, Lovers, Brothers: Surviving Sex and Poverty in Rural India, delivers fresh challenges for scholars of religion and sexuality. Often framed, however problematically, as “third gendered” or trans, hijras have been part of subcontinental culture for thousands of years. They figure in ancient epics and played significant political and social roles in Mughal courts. Under the British, they were criminalized and dispossessed of their property. More recently, they have emerged as exemplars of political incorruptibility and purveyors of public health in the context of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Saria draws on classic works in queer theory and South Asian studies to unfold hijra worlds in ways that trouble both fields. For they put to of the of the in social order to In a to of Saria writes, as by secular and the religious to the that structures their lives from and traditions of Within and social the is understood as a figure of who has cut any to and and whose power is a of their or beyond the of Saria the of hijras not the domestic but to In their and hijras in the of kin through time and are to the and of the concretely, as sex hijras do domestic sexual and and as they are to the At the as they are not from their Indeed, their through sex work and their or to on at weddings, and at ceremonies the of a not their In Saria's they make through on at weddings, religious festivals, and ceremonies and through sex work an in which through the and of When hijra are to the domestic we are a of the of sexuality in Further, as Saria hijras as for men who might be their and hijras may and or otherwise in to and modes of reproduction. In Saria's the and the are not in and are to be more and than queer of the straight have on the hijras with a of across and religious for for hijras is not from religion, as in a Christian and religious are to the in These and of Saria's and the ancient violence to her from her all I to away from the of this the is about the violence of practices that turn into in away from such bring a less more present into hijra whose in the book, takes from her when their for become in a shrine of a Such provincialize the secular of what has framed as but not through the lines of kin or and not spaces of religiosity and Saria's us new ways to about social that displace both the secular orientation of queer studies and the of religion as a In light on the religious and of the social in among their and Saria as always It is from violence it the of Saria's through the terrain between religiosity and queerness this problem space as a question of social generative such as these put to the that anthropologists apply theories that necessarily from the global into queer and religious studies from the global South drawing on innovations in decolonial and critical The improper objects and impertinent methods that such innovations call on all of we are writing these fields and the forms of intimacy possible between The the Sisters of Perpetual fakirs, and criollo are all queering religion and religioning queerness in us ourselves to and the ways they our categories and us the goddess
4 Kinship and Kinmaking Otherwise
Duke University Press eBooks · 2024
1st authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Genealogy
- Sociology
Kinship and Kinmaking Otherwise
2024-04-03
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingThis chapter maps the vitality of kinship and its queer relations across four areas: property and personhood; social death / social life; natures/cultures; and variability / relatedness otherwise. It demonstrates both how queer anthropology generates critical categories and methods for anthropological conceptions of kinship broadly and how an analysis of kinship remains central to queer theorizations of personhood, relatedness, and sociality.
Signs · 2022
1st authorCorresponding- Sociology
- Political Science
- Sociology
Celebrating Fifty Years of Feminist Studies: Notes of Appreciation from Authors
Feminist Studies · 2022-01-01
article"In celebration of fifty years since Feminist Studies began publishing, in 1972, we asked a selection of authors to convey what having their work published in Feminist Studies has meant for them, both professionally as well as personally. Following are their responses."
Modern Asian Studies · 2021 · 3 citations
- Sociology
- Political Science
- Sociology
Abstract In this roundtable discussion, five scholars of modern India with diverse methodological training examine aspects of Rupa Viswanath's 2014 book, The Pariah Problem: Caste, Religion, and the Social in Modern India , and assess its arguments and contributions. This book has made strong challenges to the scholarly consensus on the nature of caste in India, arguing that, in the Madras presidency under the British, caste functioned as a form of labour control of the lowest orders and, in this roundtable, she calls colonial Madras a ‘slave society’. The scholars included here examine that contention and the major subsidiary arguments on which it is based. Uday Chandra identifies The Pariah Problem with a new social history of caste and Dalitness. Brian K. Pennington links the ‘religionization’ of caste that Viswanath identifies to the contemporary Hindu right's concerns for religious sentiment and authenticity. Lucinda Ramberg takes up Viswanath's account of the constitution of a public that excluded the Dalit to inquire further about the gendered nature of that public and the private realm it simultaneously generated. Zoe Sherinian calls attention to Viswanath's characterization of missionary opposition to social equality for Dalits and examines missionary and Dalit discourses that stand apart from those that Viswanath studied. Joel Lee extends some of Viswanath's claims about the Madras presidency by showing strong parallels to social practices in colonial North India. Finally, Viswanath's own response addresses the assessments of her colleagues.
The Journal of Asian Studies · 2021-11-01
article1st authorCorrespondingUnruly Figures: Queerness, Sex Work, and the Politics of Sexuality in Kerala. By Navaneetha Mokkil. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2019. 288 pp. ISBN: 9780295745572 (cloth). - Volume 80 Issue 4
Frequent coauthors
- 2 shared
Douglas M. Haynes
Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- 1 shared
K. P. Karunakaran
- 1 shared
Evilim Vitória de Souza Silva
- 1 shared
Inderpal Grewal
Yale University
- 1 shared
Heather Berg
Washington University in St. Louis
- 1 shared
Jennifer Musial
- 1 shared
Joanna Davidson
- 1 shared
Ashner Ghertner
Awards & honors
- Michelle Rosaldo Best First Book Prize in Feminist Anthropol…
- Ruth Benedict Prize from the Association for Queer Anthropol…
- Clifford Geertz Prize for Best Book in the Anthropology of R…
- Honorable Mention for the Best Book in South Asian Studies f…
- Kenneth W. Payne Prize by the Association for Queer Anthropo…
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