In memoriam: E. Jane Doering, professor emerita
E. Jane Doering, professor emerita in the Program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame, died Aug. 23. She was 91.
Born the third of four daughters in a family of Irish heritage in Bergenfield, New Jersey, Elizabeth Jane O’Connor Doering earned a bachelor’s degree at the New Jersey College for Women and a master’s of education degree from Goucher College in Towson, Maryland. To continue her study of the French language, she attended summer school at Laval University in Quebec, where she met Bernard Doering, a fellow Francophile.
The couple married in 1958 and moved to Helena, Alabama, where they taught at a private secondary school for boys. After Bernard earned his doctorate from the University of Colorado, the Doerings moved to South Bend, where Jane taught French at St. Mary’s Academy and St. Joseph High School and Bernard served on the faculty of Notre Dame’s Department of Romance Languages and Literatures.
The Doerings established the University’s study abroad program in Angers, France, two hours southwest of Paris by train, in 1966. They mentored six cohorts of Notre Dame students in a program that has offered more than 3,000 students the opportunity to become fluent in French and immerse themselves in French culture.
Jane earned a master’s degree from Notre Dame and a doctoral degree from Northwestern University, both in French literature. She joined the Notre Dame faculty in 1992, teaching 19th- and 20th-century French literature and specializing in the study of the French philosopher Simone Weil. She published three books and authored more than three dozen articles on Weil and was a member of the American Weil Society and the international Association pour l’étude de la pensée de Simone Weil. She taught in Notre Dame’s Teachers as Scholars program and the Forever Learning Institute of South Bend.
Doering was preceded in death by Bernard, her husband of more than 60 years. She is survived by four children and 10 grandchildren.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Oct. 8 at the Church of Our Lady of Loretto at Saint Mary’s College.
Latest Faculty & Staff
- Economist Kirk Doran wins UK’s Panmure House Prize honoring interdisciplinary researchKirk Doran, an associate professor in the Department of Economics at Notre Dame, has won the 2024 Adam Smith Panmure House Prize. The prize, named after the forefather of economics, celebrates those who embody Smith’s empiricism and long-term interdisciplinary thinking in their research.
- Political scientist explores extending constitutional duties to private actorsNew research from Christina Bambrick, the Filip Family Assistant Professor of Political Science at Notre Dame, explores the nonconventional idea that each of us, as private citizens, may be responsible for upholding the constitutional rights of our fellow citizens. She examines constitutional politics across the globe to explore these different approaches to balancing rights and responsibilities in a democratic society.
- Six new faculty join psychology department to advance research on mental health, other disordersThe Department of Psychology at the University of Notre Dame has hired six new faculty members this year, a significant expansion of a field that is core to the University’s commitment to fighting the U.S. mental health crisis.
- Notre Dame theologian to receive 2024 Ratzinger Prize from VaticanCyril O’Regan, the Catherine F. Huisking Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, has been selected to receive the 2024 Ratzinger Prize in Theology, widely regarded as the most prestigious award in the field. Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, will present the award to O’Regan and to sculptor Etsurō Sotoo during a ceremony at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City on Nov. 22. Both winners will also have an audience with Pope Francis earlier that day.
- Labor economist seeks to understand how society continues to innovate — and why relationships are key to progressKirk Doran, an associate professor of economics, has a research mission to identify where and how new knowledge is created. He is one of four finalists from leading global institutions for the 2024 Adam Smith Panmure House Prize.
- Virtual learning detrimental to school attendance, especially in districts with higher poverty rates, study findsSince the COVID-19 pandemic, rates of chronic absenteeism have nearly doubled across the nation for students in kindergarten through grade 12. This increase was tied to the mode of instruction during the early years of the pandemic. In particular, schools that employed virtual learning as the primary teaching mode during the 2020-21 school year experienced a greater increase in chronic absenteeism in the following year. That increase was significantly greater in school districts with higher levels of poverty, according to new research from William Evans, the Keough-Hesburgh Professor of Economics and co-founder of Notre Dame’s Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities.