Dr Alysa Ghose
Lecturer in Religion and Decolonisation

Contact details
- Tel: 01316508914
- Email: alysa.ghose@ed.ac.uk
Availability
Office hours: please email to make an appointment (online or in person)
Background
I earned my PhD from the University of Edinburgh in 2019 and am an anthropologist by training. I held a lectureship in the Anthropology of Race and Decoloniality in Social Anthropology at Edinburgh from 2020-2021 and another Social Anthropology Lectureship at the University of Manchester before returning to Edinburgh in Religious Studies.
Please note my pronouns are she/her/ella.
Undergraduate teaching
Sample courses include:
TRS Foundations Seminar: Religion in/and the Black Atlantic
Global Indigenous Religions: Africa and the Diaspora
Postgraduate teaching
Sample courses include:
The Practice of Fieldwork in the Study of Religion
Race and Religiosity
Open to PhD supervision enquiries?
Yes
Areas of interest for supervision
I am interested in supervising projects regarding religiosity and (post)/(de)coloniality and colonialism; Afrodiasporic religiosity; trance and/or 'possession;' religion and reproduction, gender, and sexuality; religion and kinship and/or relationships with spirits and ancestors; religion and race; ethnographic, everyday explorations of religion and spirituality, and religion and spirituality in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Research summary
My work is focused in Cuba on questions of race, gender, kinship, sexuality, and nation. My first book project: 'Mothers, Spirits, and Hustlers: Gender, Race and Making Do in Cuban Espiritismo' examines Espiritismo Cruzado, a religious tradition of African inspiration, predicated on communication with spirits of the dead. I show how relationships and communities (made up of both the living and the dead) are fostered and how they help practitioners get by in the everyday hustle of making do in post-Soviet, post-Fidel Havana. I endeavour to address the interrelated material and affective concerns of my interlocutors on their terms.