Raymond Benoit, Ph.D.: 1936-2025
03/03/2025
Raymond P. Benoit, Ph.D., professor emeritus in English, died Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. He was 88.
Benoit was a long-time professor at Saint Louis University. He began his teaching career at SLU in 1965 and retired from the University in 2014.
Raymond P. Benoit, Ph.D., professor emeritus in English. SLU file photo.
Benoit was born on April 17, 1936, in Washington state. He earned his undergraduate degree in English from Gonzaga University in 1959. He then earned his doctorate degree in English at the University of Oregon in 1965. His dissertation was titled, “English and American Romanticism: A Definition.”
While at Gonzaga he began his teaching career by serving as a graduate assistant. He was an instructor at the University of Oregon and joined the SLU faculty in 1965 as an assistant professor.
Benoit was promoted to associate professor in 1968 and full professor in 1971.
A former NDEA and Woodrow Wilson Fellow, Benoit had been a Fulbright Professor of American Literature in Germany and was Chairman of the Department of English at Saint Louis University throughout the 1970s. His research interests include 19th-century British & American Romantic literature, Myth and Symbolism, and American Literature.
In 1973, his book, Single Nature's Double Name: The Collectedness of the Conflicting in British and American Romanticism was published. Throughout his lengthy career, he also published a number of articles.
A funeral Mass will be celebrated Friday, March 7, at 10 a.m. at Holy Rosary Catholic Church, in West Seattle, WA.
Latest Newslink
- Helen De Cruz, Ph.D.: 1978-2025Helen De Cruz, Ph.D., the Danforth Chair in the Humanities at Saint Louis University, died Friday, June 20, 2025. She was 46. The Belgian-born philosopher examined why and how humans engage in pursuits that seem remote from the immediate concerns of survival and reproduction, such as theology, mathematics, and science.
- 'I am More Than Just a Refugee': A SLU Student Shares His StoryThe Saint Louis University-Jesuit Worldwide Learning (SLU-JWL) program offers remote bachelor's degrees to international students displaced by conflict, lack of opportunity, and poverty in places such as refugee camps in Kenya and Malawi. One student, Dictor Olame, reflected on his experience as a SLU student in the Kakuma refugee camp in North-Western Kenya.
- SLU Supports St. Louis by Hosting City's Tornado Relief CenterIn the weeks following a devastating tornado that tore through St. Louis on May 16, hundreds of households have turned to a centralized Disaster Assistance Center (DAC) at Chaifetz Arena for assistance.
- Persistence Pays Off for Fulbright Award RecipientAnuj Gandhi is a Fulbright Scholar. A year after being chosen as an alternate, Gandhi has been chosen for a Fulbright-Nehru Student Research Award. With the Award, the recent Saint Louis University graduate intends to "investigate how globalization-based acculturation influences Indian young adults' attitudes toward mental health and treatment options."
- Pestellos Honored With Honorary Street NameA stretch of Laclede Avenue that has undergone major development since President Fred P. Pestello, Ph.D., and First Lady Fran Pestello, Ph.D., arrived at Saint Louis University 11 years ago now has a new name.
- Disaster Assistance Center Opens to the Community in Response to the May 16 TornadoThe City of St. Louis, in partnership with the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency and Saint Louis University, opened a Disaster Assistance Center (DAC) on Monday, June 9, to serve as a central space for tornado-affected residents to connect with agencies offering guidance, resources, and assistance related to recovery and long-term support. The DAC will take place inside Chaifetz Arena.