Marla Frederick Named Dean of Harvard Divinity School

The scholar of the African American religious experience will become dean January 1.

Marla Frederick

Marla Frederick, formerly a professor of African and African American studies and the study of religion in Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), will become dean of the Harvard Divinity School on January 1. A scholar of the African American religious experience and former president of both the American Academy of Religion and the Association of Black Anthropologists, she succeeds David N. Hempton, the O’Brian professor of divinity and McDonald Family professor of Evangelical theological studies, who announced in October 2022 that he planned to step down at the end of the academic year. (Bartlett Professor of New England Church History David Holland will serve as interim dean until Frederick’s arrival.) She returns to Harvard—where she was a faculty member from 2003 to 2019 and served in a variety of leadership roles—from Emory University’s Candler School of Theology.

President Claudine Gay, announcing the appointment, welcomed Frederick back to the University. “I am confident that Marla’s leadership qualities, her academic stature, her wide-ranging curiosity, her collaborative mindset, and her thoughtful and caring approach to all she does will combine to make her an excellent new dean.”

During her prior Harvard service, Frederick was director of graduate studies and chair of the admissions committee for the department of African and African American studies, served as a member of the advisory committee to the 2011 search for a dean of the Radcliffe Institute that led to the selection of Jones professor of American Studies Lizbeth Cohen, and was interim chair of the Committee on the Study of Religion.

Frederick was also recognized for her pedagogical skills. In 2016, she was named a Harvard College Professor, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ highest honor for teaching excellence. That same year, she was involved (together with former Plummer professor of Christian morals and Pusey minister in the Memorial Church Jonathan Walton), in advocating for the acquisition of the personal archive of Bishop Carlton Pearson, a prominent African-American Pentecostal televangelist, for Harvard’s library.

That acquisition squares with her academic area of expertise. In her scholarship examining how religion, race and politics can shape people’s experience, she has written or coauthored four books, including two on televangelism: Colored Television: American Religion Gone Global; and Televised Redemption: Black Religious Media and Racial Empowerment. She is also the author of an ethnography of black women churchgoers in North Carolina, Between Sundays: Black Women and Everyday Struggles of Faith, and of Local Democracy Under Siege: Activism, Public Interests, and Private Politics, a collaborative examination of American democracy in an ordinary North Carolina community, which won the 2008 book prize of the Society for the Anthropology of North America.

Provost Alan M. Garber, who co-led the search for the new dean, said in a statement that “Marla deeply understands the unique role and influence of the Harvard Divinity School, and why it is a cherished institution.” Noting her “thoughtful, collaborative nature,” Garber added that she “will bring a fresh perspective informed by her service both within and outside of Harvard” to “the challenges and opportunities facing the school….”

Read the official University announcement here.

Read more articles by Jonathan Shaw

You might also like

Former ICC Prosecutor Discusses Iran, Ukraine, and Venezuela

At a Harvard event, Luis Moreno-Ocampo explains why war crimes are hard to define and prosecute. 

Harvard Weathers a Year of Turmoil

The federal government has launched unprecedented actions against the University. Here’s a guide.

AI Hunts For Stolen Harvard Coins

A museum curator and a computer scientist track down ancient coins taken in a legendary heist.

Most popular

Brief News around Harvard January-February 2025

Nobel honorands, institutional voice, civil discourse, Rhodes Scholars, and more

The Third Way

Ellen Langer rejects binary thinking, embracing instead a “third way.”

Martin Nowak Placed on Leave a Second Time

Further links to Jeffrey Epstein surface in newly released files.

Explore More From Current Issue

Mercy Otis Warren in period attire writes at a desk by candlelight, surrounded by books.

The Woman Who Penned the Case for War

Mercy Otis Warren’s poetry and plays incited the Patriot movement.

A glowing orange sun with a star and a trailing gas cloud in space.

A Harvard Astrophysicist Explains the Bizarre Behavior of a Supergiant Star

The dimming and rapid rotation of Betelgeuse may be caused by a hidden companion.

Illustration of two students in Harvard hoodies, one speaking animatedly to a phone, the other reading, looking annoyed.

We’re All Harvard Influencers, Like It or Not

In the digital age, it’s hard to avoid playing into the mythology.