Diana Eck
Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies and Frederic
Wertham Professor of Law and Psychiatry in Society at Harvard University
Director of The Pluralism Project
RCCongress 2010: Plenary Speaker on Pluralism
Diana L. Eck is Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies
and Frederic Wertham Professor of Law and Psychiatry in Society at
Harvard University and Director of The Pluralism Project, a research
team at Harvard University created to explore the new religious
diversity of the United States and its meaning for the American
pluralist experiment.
The Pluralism Project, funded by the Lilly Endowment, the Pew
Charitable Trusts, the Ford Foundation, and the Rockefeller
Foundation has been documenting the growing presence of the Muslim,
Buddhist, Hindu, Pagan, Sikh, Jain, and Zoroastrian communities in
the U.S. This research project has involved students and professors
at Harvard and in a dozen affiliate colleges and universities in
research on America's new religious landscape. In 1994, Diana Eck and
the Pluralism Project published World Religions in Boston, A Guide to
Communities and Resources. The Pluralism Project's interactive
CD-ROM, On Common Ground: World Religions in America, a multimedia
introduction to the world's religions in the American context, was
published in 1997 by Columbia University Press. It has won major
awards from Media & Methods, EdPress, and Educom.
Diana Eck's book, Encountering God: A Spiritual Journey from Bozeman
to Banaras (Beacon Press, 1993), studies the question of religious
difference in the context of Christian theology and the comparative
study of religion. It addresses issues of Christian faith in a world
of many faiths and, more broadly, the issues of religious diversity
that challenge people of every faith. Encountering God won the 1994
Melcher Book Award of the Unitarian Universalist Association and the
1995 Louisville Grawemeyer Book Award in Religion, given for work
that reflects a significant breakthrough in our understanding of religion.
Diana Eck's most recent book, A New Religious America: How a
"Christian Country" Has Become the World's Most Religiously Diverse
Nation. (Harper SanFrancisco, 2001) addresses the challenges for the
United States of the more complex religious landscape of the
post-1965 period of renewed immigration.
In 1996, Diana L. Eck was appointed to a State Department Advisory
Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad, a twenty-member commission
charged with advising the Secretary of State on enhancing and
protecting religious freedom in the overall context of human rights.
In 1998, Eck received the National Humanities Medal from President
Clinton and the National Endowment for the Humanities for her work on
American religious pluralism. In 2002, she received the American
Academy of Religion Martin Marty Award for the Public Understanding
of Religion. In 2003, she received the Governor's Humanities Award
from the Montana Council for the Humanities in her home state of
Montana. She served as President of the American Academy of Religion
in 2006-06.
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