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The Harvard Way in the Study of Religion*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2011

William R. Darrow
Affiliation:
Williams College

Extract

I feel very deeply both the honor and the responsibility attendant upon Professor Carman's kind invitation to speak to you this evening. The attempt to make some sense of the history and context of this Center on the occasion of its silver anniversary is a challenge made poignant by the tragic and repeated experiences of loss we have so recently suffered. This even more than chronological milestones makes such a celebration of memory and community all the more necessary and meaningful. I am very privileged to have been entrusted with this role.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1988

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References

The staffs of the Williamsiana collection at Williams College and of the Harvard Archives have been uniformly helpful in facilitating the research on which some of these remarks are based. I want also to acknowledge the superb minutes that were kept by Marjorie Dunhan, secretary to the committee. The insight provided by a number of people who heard this lecture have been incorporated into this later draft. Specifically, I want to thank John Carman, Diana Eck, M. David Eckel, Tu Wei Ming, and Preston Williams for their questions and elucidations. Finally, I want also to thank H. Ganse Little, Jr. for his usual fine critique of, and comments on, this essay.

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