Faculty
Whitney Sanford

Assistant Professor of Religion
Ph.D.
Religion and Nature, Hinduism, North Indian Devotional Traditions
Office: 107 Anderson Hall
Phone: (352) 392-1625
Email: wsanford@ufl.edu
Whitney Sanford received her BA in English and Philosophy from Bowdoin College and M.A. and PhD in Religious Studies from the University of Pennsylvania, specializing in north Indian devotional traditions.
She teaches and researches in two main areas: Religion and Nature and Religions of Asia. In the area of Religion and Nature, she focuses on environmental movements of the global South and religious attitudes towards agricultural sustainability, particularly in South Asia. Her second book Transforming Agriculture: Hindu Narrative and Ecological Imagination explores how Hindu agricultural narratives provide the foundation to expand the ecological imagination to rethink agricultural practice. She conducted fieldwork in Baldeo, India, examining narratives and practices related to Balaram, a deity associated with agriculture. Current research interests include the relationship between agricultural biotechnology and forms of neo-colonialism, particularly in Latin America and India. Her new project "Gandhi's Environmental Legacy: Food Sovereignty and Social Movements" investigates Gandhi's influence on sustainability and food and water sovereignty movements.
In the Religions of Asia area, she focuses on Braj devotional traditions. Her first book Singing Krishna: Sound Becomes Sight in Paramanand's Poetry (SUNY 2008) explores the role of devotional poetry in ritual practice. She has published articles in JAAR, Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, International Journal of Hindu Studies and Alternative Krishnas, edited by Guy Beck (SUNY Press, 2005). Additionally, she is interested in how participation in outdoor recreation activities functions as religious experience and to what extent this participation leads to a practiced environmental ethic.
