George J. Willauer


Professor of English Emeritus
Charles J. MacCurdy Professor of American Studies Emeritus  
College Marshal Emeritus

Joined Connecticut College: 1962-2002

Education
B.A., Wesleyan University; M.A., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania


Specializations

American literature and literary figures, 1890-present

William Faulkner

Emily Dickinson

Robert Frost

Society of Friends

Professor Willauer's expertise lies in American literature, and he regularly taught introductory courses in literary analysis and composition; intermediate survey courses in British literature, American literature and literature of the sea.

He taught a two-course sequence on American literature from 1890-present and a course on "Faulkner and the Southern Tradition." He also led an advanced seminar on "The Poetry of Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost" and an interdisciplinary course on nature writing including prose, prose fiction, poetry and painting.

Willauer's study of Celia Thaxter (1835-1894), poet, painter and center of an artist's colony on an island off the coast of New Hampshire, earned him a visiting faculty fellowship from Yale University, where he was previously a Mellon Visiting Faculty Fellow. He was also a visiting lecturer at Westminster College in Oxford, England; Williams College American Maritime Studies Program; University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Amsterdam University, and Leiden University, Holland, the latter two under the auspices of the United States Information Agency (USIA).

His collection of essays by various historians titled A Lyme Miscellany (1977) commemorated the bicentennial of Lyme, Connecticut. He has written extensively about literary figures in American literature and personalities who contributed to the Quaker heritage. His articles and reviews have appeared in Quaker HistoryThe American Quarterly and The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

Willauer served as the Dean of Academic Studies, several terms as chair of the Department of English, introduced the American Studies Program to the curriculum and was an early advocate of the Gender and Women's Studies Program. He also served as Chair of the Advisory Committee on Tenure, Appointments and Termination of Appointments, and was Secretary of the Instruction Committee. He served as College Marshal from 1988-2002. 

In 2002, Willauer received the , conferred on individuals whose accomplishments or service have enhanced the College's reputation and nourished its growth. It is the highest honor the College can confer. 

George J. Willauer Curriculum Vitae 

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Mailing Address

George J. Willauer
Connecticut College
270 Mohegan Ave.
New London, CT 06320