Events and stories about students, faculty & alumni

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The first Thursday of every month

Fall 2025: Hispanic Studies Film Series

Fall 2025: Hispanic Studies Film Series

  • WHEN: The first Thursday of every month
  • FILMS:
    1. The Garden – October 2nd
    2. Contracorriente– November 6th
    3. Real Women Have Curves– December 4th
  • WHERE: Seabury N 129
  • TIME: 4:30 PM

Light snacks will be provided

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Tuesday, September 30, 2025 @ 12:15PM

Discover Germany at Trinity College!

Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Time: 12:15 pm (Common Hour)
Location: Seabury Hall, S-204

Join us for a German luncheon! Enjoy delicious pizza followed by authentic German desserts.

  • Explore the German Major and Minor!
  • Get to Know the German Club!
  • Be Part of the German Community at Trinity!

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Wednesday, October 8, 2025

The Delacate Beast - A Book Talk

The Delicate Beast: A Book Talk
Wednesday, October 8, 2025
Reese Room, Smith House 4:30pm
Open to the public

In the 1950s, a boy lives amid opulence and privilege, spending days at the beach or in the cool hills above the sweltering capital of “The Tropical Republic,” enjoying leisurely Sunday lunches around the family compound’s swimming pool. That is, until the reign of The Mortician begins, unleashing unimaginable horrors that bring his childhood idyll to an end. Narrowly escaping the violent fate visited on so many of his fellow citizens, he and his brother follow their parents into exile in the United States where they must start a new life. But as he grows, he never feels at home, and leaves his family to travel across Europe and outrun the ghosts of the past.

Roger Celestin is Professor Emeritus of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Connecticut. The Delicate Beast is his first novel. He lives in Manhattan.

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Tuesday, October 21, 2025

2025 Distinguished Scholar Lecture: Creative Writing 101 as Taught in Revolutionary Russia

Date: Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Time: 4:30pm
Location: Reese Room, Smith House
Speaker: Dr. Carol Any, Professor of Language and Culture Studies, Emerita

Creative Writing 101 as Taught in Revolutionary Russia

What is involved in the creative process? How should aspiring writers be trained? In an age of reading for entertainment, Bolshevik leaders intent on remaking culture for the communist era believed that their success would depend on the books people read for fun. They hoped writers would produce fiction with engaging heroes whom readers would view as role models. This lecture will address the various aesthetic views held by prominent Bolsheviks, as well as their disagreements over practices of teaching and mentoring young writers in academic seminars, workshops, and publishing houses.