Erwan Dianteill


Erwan Dianteill is a French sociologist and anthropologist, graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris-Saclay, holder of the aggregation in the Social Sciences, Doctor of Sociology and professor of Cultural and Social anthropology at the Sorbonne. He is also Senior Laureate of the Institut Universitaire de France since 2012 and Non-Resident Fellow of the W. E. B. Du Bois Research Institute at Harvard University since 2017. Dianteill's work explores anthropological and sociological theories about religion and interconnections between political and religious powers. It also includes the study of symbolic origins of domination and resistance. He is a specialist in the anthropology of African and African-American religions.
Erwan Dianteill created in 2010 the Center of Cultural and Social Anthropology component of the School of Humanities and Social SciencesSorbonne. Along with Francis Affergan, he also founded cArgo – International Journal for Cultural and Social Anthropology, in 2011.
He has twice served as Chair of the Department of Social sciences of the Paris Descartes University, then University of Paris (2019).
He was a visiting professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara; Tulane University; the University of Buenos Aires; the National University of Honduras; the University of Havana; the University of Vienna; the University of Salento; and Harvard University. He was a Fellow of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University in 2024–2025. He is a Visiting Professor at the University Ca'Foscari in Venice in 2026.
His book The Oracle and the Temple - From Medieval Geomancy to the Church of Ifa was awarded the by the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-Lettres - Institut de France in 2025. It is the first work on Africa to receive this prize.

Critical readings on religion

Dianteill conducts a critical reading of the history of anthropology and sociology of religions.
Dianteill contributed to these works with a critical assessment of the contributions of Marcel Mauss, W. E. B. Du Bois, Roger Bastide, Michel Leiris, Zora Neale Hurston, Roger Caillois, Lydia Cabrera, Lucien Goldmann and Pierre Bourdieu to the social sciences of religion.
In the third book of their trilogy, Dianteill and Löwy have also shown the fertility of literary fiction to understand religion and the sacred. Dianteill analyzes in that book the fictions of Joris K. Huysmans, Ahmadou Kourouma, Amos Tutuola, Umberto Eco and Alison Lurie.

Research on African American religions

Dianteill has done researches on Afro-American cultures, on the evolution of autochthonous religions in West Africa and on new Christian churches. He published two books on Afrocuban religions in Havana and one book on the African American Spiritual Church in New Orleans.
His work on Cuban Santeria, and in particular his very precise study of the emergence of a written tradition within this Afro-Cuban religion, is an “essential reference” in the field. According to Roberto Motta, a specialist in African religions in Brazil, this book is a "veritable treatise on Afro-Cuban religions There isn't a single Brazilian who has spent any time with Candomblé in Bahia and Rio, or Xangô in Recife, who can't find himself in the people, the temples, the rituals, the initiations described here, and in Erwan Dianteill's enthusiasm. “ For Bertrand Hell, this is a ”major work“, which ”favors a singular method combining classical analysis of interviews, texts and figures with a personal religious investment“, while renewing ”the anthropological view of Afro-Cuban religions and, more broadly, of all systems of communication with the spirits ".
In addition, Dianteill is one of the few researchers to have studied the African-American spiritual churches of New Orleans, which integrate Catholic, Protestant elements and an underlying Vaudou influence. Denis Constant-Martin, professor at Sciences Po, writes about Dianteill 's book La Samaritaine Noire : "Erwan Dianteill's remarkable investigation not only uncovers a network of atypical churches, it also provides a better understanding of the history of New Orleans, and confirms, based on other sources, the historical links between the city and the Caribbean region."
His interview of Henry Louis Gates Jr., on the occasion of the publication of Gates' book "Black Church" in France, clarifies the use and limits of Marxist theory to explain African American religion. The same interview revisits the debate between Melville Herskovits and E. Franklin Frazier on Africanisms in the Black Church.

Research on African religions

Erwan Dianteill has been conducting a fieldwork since 2007 in Porto-Novo on the transformation of the Fa/Ifá divination in a modern African city.
He has shown the meaningful link between Ifa divination and Arab and Latin geomancy in the Middle Ages. One of the signs of the Ifa system is the equivalent of the Morning Star in medieval geomancy, that is the planet Venus.
Furthermore, Dianteill has traced the history of the Church of Ifá since its founding in the early 1930s in Nigeria and Benin. This approach is supplemented by a precise ethnography of the contemporary liturgy of this religious institution, which was formed from the mythology of Ifá, taken up in a Protestant theological and ecclesial form. This investigation on the Church of Ifá questions religious syncretism between African culture and Christianity in new ways, by reformulating the categories of material acculturation and formal acculturation. The book L'oracle et le temple is, according to Jacob Olupona, "the latest work on Ifa scholarship and stands as important intervention in the anthropology of religion".
In addition, Dianteill was the first scholar to study extensively the Epiphany festival of Porto-Novo (Benin), a unique popular celebration that a Catholic missionary and a Vodun dignitary initiated in 1923. He published the first book on the subject in Gun language, with a preface from the philosopher Paulin Hountondji.
Dianteill's three books, on Havana in the 1990s, New Orleans in the 2000s and Porto-Novo in the 2010s, form a trilogy of Afro-Atlantic religious anthropology. Dianteill has carried out ethnographic and historical research in these colonial and port cities, all part of the Atlantic slave trade and creolization places for African and European civilizations. The conclusion of L'oracle et le temple gives an account of this itinerary and proposes a comparative analysis of Afro-American and African religions, between Latin America, North America and West Africa.
Far from looking for the historical origins of Afro-American religions, Dianteill looks at the process of transculturation and creolization at work in colonial and post-colonial America as a heuristic model. This method leads to a better understanding of the transformations of contemporary African religions, in urban, multi-ethnic environments characterized by great religious diversity.

At the UNESCO

Erwan Dianteill is counselor for the Humanities and Social Sciences at the .
He was President of the Intergovernmental Council for the Management of Social Transformations of the UNESCO, which includes 35 countries.
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He was previously vice-president of the same council from 2017 until 2019, representing Western Europe and North America.
Erwan Dianteill and Ndri Thérèse Assié Lumumba are the organizers of the , bringing together researchers from nineteen UNESCO member states. The proceedings of this historical conference have been published in 2024: "

Decorations

Main publications (in French)

  • 2024 The Oracle and the Temple - From Medieval Geomancy to the Church of Ifa , Geneva, Labor & Fides, 336 p.
  • 2019 Dioses y signos, Madrid, Ediciones de la Universidad Complutense, 2019, 465 p. . Preface: Carmen Bernand.
  • 2017 Porto-Novo Epiphany - Texts, History, Ethnography, Porto-Novo & Paris, , 2017 ; Preface: Paulin Hountondji.
  • 2017 Fictitious sacred - Sociology and religion, literary approaches, Paris, Editions de l'éclat, collection "Imaginary philosophy"
  • 2011 Eshu, god of Africa and the New World, Paris, Larousse
  • 2009 Sociology and religion III – Unusual approaches, Paris, PUF, collection "Sociology today"
  • 2008 The Spectacular Possession : theater and globalization, journal Gradhiva, April 2008.
  • 2006 The Black Samaritan Woman - African American Spiritual churches in New Orleans, Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, collection "Cahiers de l’Homme"
  • 2006 Sociology and religion II – Dissident approaches, Paris, PUF, collection "Sociology today"
  • 2000 Of Gods and signs ''- Initiation, divination and writing in Afro-Cuban religions. Paris, Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, collection "Civilisations et sociétés"
  • 1995 The Scholar and the Santero - Birth of the study of Afro-Cuban religions ''. Paris, Editions L'Harmattan / Université Paris 8, Collection "Histoire des Antilles Hispaniques",