John Grayson

Professor of Religion on the Alumnae Foundation

John Grayson

Contact:
Skinner Hall, Room 201A
413-538-2290

Joined MHC: 1977

John T. Grayson

Education:

  • Columbia University, Ph.D., M.Phil.
  • Andrews University Seminary, M.A.
  • Atlantic Union College, B.A.

Specialization: Philosophy of religion; Frederick Douglass; New Testament studies.

John Grayson's current scholarly project is an intellectual biography on the women who shaped the mind of Frederick Douglass.

As a Senior Fulbright Fellow to Germany and an American Cultural Specialist for the United States Information Service, Grayson has lectured throughout western Europe and Africa. He has also been a Ford Fellow and a Danforth Associate.

Grayson has been faculty lecturer for two Mount Holyoke alumnae trips abroad. In 1990, he presented "On the Passion Play: Christian Theology and German Culture in the Seventeenth Century" as alumnae traveled through Germany, Switzerland, and Austria on their way to Oberammergau. He also lectured on "Comparative Religious Myths" for the Tapestry of Ancient Cultures Eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea Alumnae Association cruise in 1997.

During the 1997–1998 academic year, Grayson, an ordained minister, served as Mount Holyoke's interim dean of religious life.

Grayson teaches Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion, On Human Freedom, Creation and Evolution, and Spirituals and the Blues. Before coming to Mount Holyoke, Grayson taught at Haverford, Marlboro, Smith, and Hampshire Colleges.

Related

Meet the Department

Lucas Wilson looks at economic and noneconomic conditions that restrict opportunities and inhibit social progress for African Americans.

Kenneth Tucker asks, "What is the nature of the modern western world?" and "What social processes characterize our modern life?"

Nationalism, Marxism, feminism, post-colonial theory, and questions of landscape, place, and the meaning of modern development are central concerns for Joan Cocks.

Harold Garrett-Goodyear's research focuses on notions of justice in history.

Siraj Dean Ahmed investigates how literature, film, and philosophy--European, colonial, and postcolonial--respond to the long history of globalization.