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Weekend of Feb. 21–22

We look forward to welcoming students and families to our Scholarship Competition on Sunday. The event will take place as scheduled. Attendees, please refer to your email for the complete itinerary and additional information.

Due to the upcoming high-impact winter storm, UHart will be closed on Monday, Feb. 23. There will be no in-person classes held on Monday. Please note that when a campus closing prevents an in-person class from meeting at its scheduled time, faculty may opt to conduct classes or provide assignments online. Students should check Blackboard and their email regularly on such days to learn of any alternate arrangements. Online and remote courses are not affected by campus closings and meet as scheduled.

Storm Updates and Emergency Closing Information

Jonathan Daigle

Jonathan  Daigle  headshot

Associate Dean Finance; Department Chair, Academic Strategies; Associate Professor of English

Dean's Office for Hillyer, Academic Strategies, English

Hillyer College
860.768.4838 Hillyer Hall 269
Education

PhD and MA, University of Wisconsin-Madison

BA, College of William & Mary


Jonathan Daigle is an associate professor of English. He teaches Introduction to Composition, Introduction to Literary Analysis, Literature of Non-Western Cultures, and Survey of African American Literature.

"Small classes, great colleagues, and an excellent network of student resources make Hillyer College a great place to teach and learn," says Daigle. "Students know to seek out their professors outside of class, and I enjoy this personalized teaching. I especially enjoy learning from students, who often look at texts and issues from perspectives that are new to me."

Daigle's research interests include:

  • Nineteenth-century US literature
  • African American literature and culture
  • Literature and science
  • American studies

“Paul Laurence Dunbar and the Marshall Circle: Racial Representation from Blackface to Black Naturalism,” African American Review 43.1

“The Social Gospel in Evolutionary Time: George Washington Cable’s ‘Perhaps Unwise Love,’” ESQ 59.1

“Miss Ravenel’s Conversion, Evolutionary Realism, and the Moving Equilibrium,” American Literary Realism 45.3