Ethnographer.
Scholar of African Diasporic Religions.
Black Feminist.

Her research and teaching are rooted in religion, race, performance, and the intersectional politics of decolonization.

About Dr. Castor’s work

As a scholar of Trinidadian heritage, Dr. Castor is inspired by African spiritual engagements with Black liberation imaginaries and the Black radical tradition. Their current research focuses on an exploration of the spiritual ontologies and epistemologies of Black spiritual praxis as shifting our centers of being and ways of knowing towards collective care, healing, and social transformation.

“Sacred Cites”

Engaging the Spiritual in Ethnographic Knowledge (Re)production

Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses: 1-18 (2024)

Digital Ancestral Altars

Community Stories Fellowship

The Crossroads Project (2023-24)

“Ifá/Orisha Digital Counterpublics”

The Black Scholar 52(3): 17-29 (2022)

Spiritual Citizenship

Clifford Geertz Award in Anthropology of Religion
American Anthropological Association (2018)

Dr. Castor offers classes in African Diasporic Religions Race, Religion, and Politics, and more

Community is central to both my academic work and my being in the world. Included in this is everything from my “home” communities in Trinidad to the many professional associations that speak to my disciplinary and interdisciplinary engagements.

praise for Spiritual Citizenship

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praise for Spiritual Citizenship ~

Kamari Maxine Clarke
author, Mapping Yoruba Networks: Power and Agency in the Making of Transnational Communities

Spiritual Citizenship is a tour-de-force of the twenty-first century kind…a must read for those committed to decolonizing anthropology through the last bastion of the enlightenment—that of decolonizing our epistemologies of knowledge.”

Jafari Allen
author, ¡Venceremos? The Erotics of Black Self-Making in Cuba

“Trinidad and Tobago gives N. Fadeke Castor a rich and generative field to discuss blackness and pan-Africanism in new ways….Castor makes an impressive and enduring contribution to the study of African religion in the Caribbean.”