Deonnie Moodie

Dr. Deonnie Moodie is associate professor of religious studies at the University of Oklahoma. She is an ethnographer and historian of religion specializing in South Asia and its global connections. She received her BA in international studies from Hope College and her master’s and PhD degrees in South Asian religions from Harvard University. Her research has been supported by the National Humanities Center, the Henry Luce Foundation, numerous research awards from the University of Oklahoma, and a previous Fulbright-Nehru Student Researcher grant.

Dr. Moodie is the author of The Making of a Modern Temple and a Hindu City: Kālīghāț and Kolkata (Oxford University Press, 2018) and has co-edited special issues for the Journal of the American Academy of Religion (with Kirsten Wesselhoeft, 2021) and South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies (with Cassie Adcock, 2025). Her peer-reviewed articles have also appeared in the International Journal of Hindu Studies, the Journal of Law and Religion, and Religion Compass. She is on the editorial board of DECISION, the flagship publication of the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta.

Dr. Moodie regularly presents her work in public fora as well. She has served as a content consultant for the YouTube series, Crash Course: World Religions, and as a media partner for The Revealer. She has been interviewed for the Marginalia Review of Books, New Books Network, and Delhi Art Gallery. She has also delivered lectures at Harvard Divinity School, Claremont Graduate University, Seton Hall University, the University of North Florida, the University of Missouri, the Centre national de la recherché (CNRS, Paris), and the University of Bergen (Norway). She regularly organizes panels and presents her work at the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Religion, the Business History Conference, and the Annual Conference on South Asia.

Dr. Moodie’s Fulbright-Nehru project is engaging with scholars of critical management studies in India for the following purposes: to pursue research for her monograph, Business School Hinduism: An Imperial Genealogy; to enrich ongoing collaborative publications in the areas of religion and economy, religion and labor in South Asia, and cultures of management and authority; and to create partnerships between U.S. and Indian institutions, scholars, and students to advance research in postcolonial and decolonial studies in the humanities and management. Cumulatively, this work breaks new ground in excavating the possibilities that religions – and cultures, more broadly – hold for rethinking humanity’s collective economic future.