Tumgik
#wellesleycollege
world-beauty · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
The Seasons of Saturn
Credits: R. G. French, WellesleyCollege, et al., Hubble HeritageTeam, AURA, STScI, NASA
4 notes · View notes
protagonist52 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
You know by now THEKev gon take a #Selfie and use it as an opportunity to educate/inspire. As a #certifiedbartender the coolest thing is we never know where the party will be at. This weekend, we had a blast showing and receiving love at #WellesleyCollege
Would you trust your bartender if you found out he serves at at girl schools?
If you looking for your favorite neighborhood SUPERBartender (in the Boston Area) hit up TheSUPERKev
.
.
~~~
Double tap if you agree 🍷🍻
Tag 👥| Share 📲 Comment ✍🏽
Turn on post notifications 🔊
#SUPERKevtheMATHMArteNder
#CHILDSUPPORTKev
~~~
.
.
#BartenderLife #BlackExcellence #Bartender #BartenderLove #Bartending #BartendingIsCool #NaturalHairStyle #PositiveEnergy #PositiveVibes #NUBlackAlumni #NUBlackAlums #BlackAlumni #NortheasternClassof2010 #JDOAAI #BlackBartender #BalfourAcademyClassof2004 #JohnDOBryantSchoolofMathematicsandScienceClassof2005 #MaskOff #WorkSelfie #WeOutside #BlackShirt #SaintDickBracelet #NoFilterNeeded
1 note · View note
life · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Fashion from the Wellesley College campus, fall 1937. (Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images) #fashionfriday #WellesleyCollege #vintagefashion https://www.instagram.com/p/BvT-HjOgw9C/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=qs2xz7wxlvbv
274 notes · View notes
pizzabyrocco · 4 years
Video
The beautiful Florentina pizza. Infused oil, Spinach, tomatoes, feta, with oregano and parmesan cheese. #natick #natickma #ınstagood #pizza #pizzapizza #foodie #wellesley #wellesleycollege #wellesleyma https://www.instagram.com/p/B_lMzvJn9lx/?igshid=1ewze2mto9k2j
1 note · View note
Photo
Tumblr media
Norumbega shows up on a lot of maps! #Gastaldi 1556/1606; #Blaeu 1635; #Danckerts 1690; #Sturges 1943 #antiquemaps #geographicusmaps #li #newengland #wellesleycollege (at Geographicus Rare Antique Maps) https://www.instagram.com/p/B5lUo8Bp1CJ/?igshid=byzovc5szmjd
1 note · View note
rusticrescuer-blog · 6 years
Video
instagram
The Runner’s Countdown #running #runnersofinstagram #jogging #exercise #poetry #poem #wellesleycollege #lakewaban Music: Mai Tai by Jef. :) (at Natick, Massachusetts)
5 notes · View notes
astronautabby · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
#scientistswhoselfie #beekeeper #beekeeping #bees #stemisfun #wellesley #wellesleycollege
5 notes · View notes
sunrequiem · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
In an alternate universe, tomorrow would have been Commencement. But for some reason today, the alternate celebration we are about to hold is only a small blip on my emotional landscape. — I’m afraid it will feel like any other day. I don’t want to fake an ounce of happiness. I’m too tired to reflect. I’m too tired to celebrate. Even on my high school graduation, I never understood the hype of the cap and gown, except as a cultural symbol of intellect and privilege. — Still, I have been proud to be in this class since day one. I have met many kind, thoughtful, and brave sisters and siblings. I witnessed what it looks like to resist injustices and to stand in solidarity with one another. You shared your stories with me, and we shaped each other’s trajectories. I want to look in your eyes and say, “I see you. Your voice is powerful. Your life matters.” — Prior to Wellesley, there were few who I would have considered friends in my life. But among you, I felt comfortable to embrace the feminine aspects of my character — and eventually, my queerness. I harnessed the power of my creativity, and the depths of my resilience. You set me on a path for social revolution and climate justice. You never told me that I was “too much” or “not good enough.” I am still eagerly unraveling my tapestry, knowing there is more to behold. And for that, I want to say thank you. — These times demand collective responsibility to witness the broken links in our history and current adversities. We must ask ourselves what it means to move forward in a space of healing, without distancing ourselves from the past. May we lean into the whispers of the land from those who have come before us. Although we are apart, may you carry the strength of Wellesley into your socially distanced homes, and plant seeds of renewal around the nation and over the globe, exactly where you are. May the legacy of your presence embody the blessed change we need right now. May you labor in love to bring healing for our land. — #Wellesley2020 #WellesleyCollege #OneOfThem — wellesley.edu/Classof2020 (à Wellesley College) https://www.instagram.com/p/CA0E82sHGWH/?igshid=69r4yqya2sf2
0 notes
houseofellington · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
underlovlies. #vintageadvertising #wellesleycollege #lesbians https://www.instagram.com/p/B90fpN_pugH/?igshid=1a5ppippdpxg7
0 notes
beyondpaisley · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
@wellesleycollege #christmasornaments I think I gave this to my mom in...1998? Ish? When she downsized her tree she gave it back. #minenow #wellesley #wellesleycollege #college https://www.instagram.com/p/B5jQgbQFvZP/?igshid=532e5t72kzm0
0 notes
wayneeastep · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Echos of conversations shared earlier in the day linger at this outdoor seating area of the Lulu Chow Wang Campus Center, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA. https://www.WayneEastep.com #abstractphotography #WellesleyCollege #nikonphotography #collector #wallart #decorate #fineartphotography #finearts #fineartphoto #graphicimage #images #light #color #interiordesign #interiordesignsarasota #interiordesigner #interiordesigners #interiordesigns #interiordesignideas #homedecor #photography #photo#photoshoot #photos #photoart #photographs #style #instagood #style #design #evocativemoments https://www.instagram.com/p/BztyY0Jnnz-/?igshid=1bi4u13ga3li2
0 notes
life · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
From a 1949 unpublished story about life at Wellesley College — a group of students in a dormitory room watching television and reading the paper. (Nina Leen—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images) #collegelife #WellesleyCollege https://www.instagram.com/p/Bnd4JenB0FN/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=lh35zy6x2qgg
724 notes · View notes
pizzabyrocco · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Greek Salad. All of our Salads are made Fresh daily. You can add your favorite protein: Grilled Chicken, lamb strips, Falafel, or all white tuna #Natick #natickmoms #fitness #fitnessmotivation #otfnatick #wellesley #wellesleycollege #salad #greens #fresh #pizzabyrocco #natickma #natickmall #metrowest https://www.instagram.com/p/B7rT9RtHhQp/?igshid=ifdi79stpdiv
1 note · View note
curioobscurio · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
We made quite a few of these college and university signs this spring. They are the perfect decor and gift for a graduation party. . #bucknelluniversity #wellesleycollege #college #university #graduation #graduationparty #curioobscurio #handpaintedsigns #signpost #signs #handmade (at Duluth, Minnesota) https://www.instagram.com/p/BzlIkjhgxEz/?igshid=15e492tww2fkx
0 notes
Text
Wellesley Writes It: Jane Ridgeway ‘09 (@janeridgeway), Fiction Writer and Teacher
Tumblr media
Photo by Jane Ridgeway.
Jane Ridgeway is a fiction writer born and raised in Seattle, now living in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is the current Writer in Residence at the Kerouac Project of Orlando, Florida, living and writing in the house in which Jack Kerouac wrote The Dharma Bums. Her work appears in the Cover Stories anthology from Volt Books. She has an MFA in fiction from the University of Oregon, and has taught creative writing and literature at the U of O, as well as at prep schools in California and Hawai’i. Interview by Camille Bond ‘17, Wellesley Writes It series editor.
WU: Welcome, Jane, and thanks so much for chatting with the Wellesley Underground! One of your short stories was recently published in an anthology, Cover Stories. What is the story about?
So, as the title suggests, Cover Stories’ mission was to anthologize “cover” versions of other short stories—so you take a canonical (or not-so-canonical) story that you passionately love or hate, and you riff off of it, explore some particular facet of it, or write very literary fan fiction of it, essentially. It’s an exploration of that weird and glorious phenomenon in which, over the decades, a song can be transformed through the different covers of it that are performed by artists with radically different sensibilities.
My story, “Peredelkino,” is a take on Isaac Babel’s “My First Goose,” a personal favorite and a story that definitely haunts me. Babel’s narrator, Liutov, is this gentle, nervous Jewish intellectual who finds himself embedded with the incredibly violent Cossacks and has to find a way to integrate himself to survive—and because he finds himself both drawn to the sort of sexy, robust glamour of the soldiers and terrified of their brutality. My piece updates some of the same conflicts that Liutov experienced to the era of the Soviet purges of intellectuals carried out by the KGB (which took the lives of many artists, including Babel himself).
WU: As a fiction writer, are there specific themes or issues that you feel drawn to? How do you discuss these themes/issues in your writing?
Grief, loss, sex, queerness, mortality, the sturm und drang of being a teenage girl, the way the past keeps popping its head back up throughout a life/a century/a place’s history. People who try really hard to be good but aren’t very successful at it. For some reason, religion, which is certainly not because I want to espouse any particular set of beliefs through my writing, or even something I focus on deliberately—I just can’t seem to get away from it, even if I try to. I’m really interested in the stories we tell ourselves about the afterlife, and how that shapes the way we live.
WU: As an emerging fiction writer, you’ve been accepted as one of four annual residents at the Kerouac Project in Florida. Congratulations! Kerouac residents spend a season living in Kerouac Project housing and working on creative projects. What are you working on during your residency?
I’m now one month into the Kerouac and have been using my time to generate new short story material! When I accepted the Kerouac I self-imposed some pressure to come here and bang out an entire novel draft, which isn’t what’s happened so far. The Kerouac is gloriously unconstrained: I’ve been given time to work on any project I choose, so I’m taking advantage of that freedom to play a little, write outside of my usual range, and create things that aren’t geared toward any particular publication, workshop, etc.
WU: How do you hope to develop as a writer during your time at the Kerouac Project?
I’ve been greatly enjoying finding my rhythm and discovering a creative schedule that works for me outside the constraints of my usual day job and responsibilities. It’s also been an exercise in overcoming self-doubt, because when I first arrived I was walloped by a wave of uncertainty and impostor syndrome. Through some combination of “faking it till I make it” and adopting some of the swaggering ego of the Beat generation that permeates the Kerouac House, I’ve found a way through it. (Kerouac himself said, “You’re a genius all the time!” which feels awfully audacious, but I think we could all stand to borrow a little of the audacity of a man who wrote his unedited first drafts on a single continuous scroll of paper.)
WU: You previously worked as a staff writer at the Los Altos Town Crier newspaper. How, if at all, has your journalism career informed your creative writing?
Working at the paper was one of the happiest phases of my working life! I loved having an immediate and local audience of subscribers with a clear stake in the stories I was covering, rather than a hazy sense that someone might read my fiction years in the future after I’d painstakingly revised for months, spent a year or so waiting to hear back from lit mags, then many more months before publication. I also love the precise, straight-to-the-point journalistic style. (Readers of this interview may notice that my natural tendency leans to the verbose!) Having experienced journalists and a brilliant copy editor to learn from helped me write crisper prose. Coming out of an MFA writing literary fiction, I think I also took the (unproductive) attitude that all of my stories were delicate, precious creations that I couldn’t possibly let out of my hands until they were perfect. Working at a publication that publishes weekly taught me to work with a much tighter turnaround time, much more efficiently, with less unnecessary psychodrama. There’s a deadline—just get it done!
WU: You’re currently teaching in a prep school environment, and have also taught Creative Writing at the University of Oregon, where you studied for your MFA. How, if at all, has teaching the subject changed your perspective on the act of creative writing? How has it informed your development as a writer?
I wholeheartedly love teaching, even though I can’t exactly recommend it to aspiring writers on the grounds of short hours or great work-life balance! Teaching literature means I get to spend my days hanging out with some of my favorite stories, novels, and poems, and really thinking about how to break them down for a young audience. It’s great to admire literature, but it’s even more useful to know how it ticks! On a more woo-woo level, teaching has helped me as a writer because it’s balanced out some of my edges and helped me grow into a softer, more vulnerable, caring, and patient human. Which is hard as hell, and not something I’m sure I would ever have gotten good at otherwise, because that’s not my natural inclination! I’ve always tended to be a seething ball of snark and sarcasm, and, untempered, that’s no way to go through life! The writers I admire most are all able to observe how much humankind can suck without losing their love and compassion for what a desperate, scrappy lot we all are. Teaching gives you great respect for people (young or otherwise) who are trying their hardest. Being a person is hard! We shouldn’t dismiss how hard it is, even when people disappoint us.
WU: Can you tell us a bit about your background in theater, and how this background has informed your literary career?
Some useful lessons of a theater-kid background for writers:
Better to commit to a choice than to be boring
Say “yes, and”
Don’t write any dialogue so stilted your actors would be embarrassed to say it
Read everything out loud after you’ve written it
I actually first started writing seriously after a playwriting class in my senior year of high school resulted in a festival production of my short play. Watching the actors and director in rehearsal, hearing my words, realizing how I could make the work better, was one of the most electrifying experiences I’d ever had as a young person.
WU: Are there any teachers and/or students who have been particularly influential to you?
A long and glorious lineage, starting from my absolute miracle of a second-grade teacher who made me fall in love with Greek myths, to my brilliant high school English teachers who were tremendously overqualified to be teaching me grammar and who told me I could be a writer, to Prof. Erian at Wellesley who actually taught me how to edit, to the teachers who caught me as a proper adult and really kicked my butt into writing things that an audience other than myself might care about. Also, Ehud Havazelet, the stern fiction father figure who permanently broke me of the ability to use the word “impactful” or read it without a tinge of disgust.
Hillger → Culhane → Doelger → Aegerter → Erian → Kiesbye → Brown, Bradley, Havazelet
WU: You have described your thankfulness to belong to a network of writers and thinkers. How can Wellesley students and alumnx build similar networks around themselves?
I love knowing writers and artists and readers all over the country. A lot of my writer acquaintances come not from my grad program but from an eclectic network of youngsters who were all applying to grad school at the same time as me, and joined forces to share information behind the scenes on how well-funded programs were (among other things.) I’ve always found networking in the traditional sense grotesque and repellent, but I think there’s a lot to be said for finding other people who care about the things you care about, befriending them with no regard for whether they’re currently (or ever likely to be) in a position to help you, and generously sharing information that might be helpful. Do your best to root for other people’s success even though sometimes you’re going to feel bitter and jealous because you’re a human and, like all of us, you kind of suck sometimes. Also, don’t be a dickbag. We all know who the dickbags in a given community are.
WU: What is your approach to self-care?
I take a very pragmatic approach to self-care that wouldn’t play well in a glossy magazine! To me, self-care is about doing the things that will make my life better, like doing the dishes I don’t want to do, taking out the trash, and clearing my inbox, more so than ‘treating myself’, you know? This summer, this has included writing lots of snail mail, going running even when I don’t want to, and long, slow, inefficient cooking projects.
1 note · View note
rusticrescuer-blog · 6 years
Video
The Runner’ Countdown #running #runningman #runningmotivation #poetry #poems #writing #words #newengland #boston #wellesleycollege (at Massachusetts)
4 notes · View notes