Dolores Warwick Frese
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April 9, 1936
Dolores Warwick Frese | |
|---|---|
| Born | Dolores Mary Warwick April 9, 1936 Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. |
| Died | May 30, 2024 (age 88) South Bend, Indiana, U.S. |
| Occupation(s) | College professor, medievalist, writer, poet |
Dolores Mary Warwick Frese (April 9, 1936 – May 30, 2024) was an American medievalist and writer. She was an English professor at the University of Notre Dame from 1973 to 2014. She sued the university in 1978, for sexual discrimination, after she was denied tenure.
Warwick was raised in Baltimore, Maryland, the daughter of Charles Carroll Warwick and Mary Keeler Warwick. Her family was Catholic; two of her six siblings took religious vows.[1] Her grandfather Floyd Keeler became a Catholic priest late in life.[2] She graduated from the College of Notre Dame in Maryland in 1958, and attended the Writers Workshop at the University of Iowa, completed doctoral studies in English at the University of Iowa. She later earned a master's degree in theology at the University of Notre Dame.[3]
Career
Frese joined the English faculty of the University of Notre Dame in 1973; she was one of the school's first women professors. In 1978, she led a "benchmark" class action lawsuit against Notre Dame, for sexual discrimination in the employment of female faculty. The suit was settled in 1981,[4][5] and she received both tenure and back pay as a result.[6][7][8] She retired in 2014, and the Medieval Institute at Notre Dame hosted a symposium to mark the occasion. The International Congress on Medieval Studies also had sessions to mark her 2014 retirement.[9] She also wrote novels, stories, and poetry.[3]