Рет қаралды 501
“One of the most rewarding periods of my life was my Junior Year in Paris with the Smith group. I found that the knowledge of a foreign language, acquired by any student who is fortunate enough to study abroad, has an immeasurable and lasting effect on their life.” - Jacqueline Bouvier, November 1961
Columbia Global Centers | Paris, Smith College Paris, and the Smith College Club of France host the launch of Jacqueline in Paris, the latest novel by bestselling author Ann Mah. The evening's speakers explored and expanded on the transformative power of Paris - how even a single year in the City of Lights can greatly influence one's life, as it did for Jacqueline Bouvier before she became First Lady.
0:00 - Introduction to the evening by Pauline Lemasson, Development Chair of AAWE
1:35 - Presentation “Junior Year Abroad as Discovery and Transformation" by Robin Silver, President of the Smith College Club of France.
9:15 - Presentation "The History of Reid Hall: Artists, Radicals, and Visionaries" by Brunhilde Biebuyck, Director of Columbia Global Centers | Paris
29:17 - Janet Skeslien Charles introduced by Pauline Lemasson
31:19 - Reading from "Jacqueline in Paris" and remarks by Janet Skeslien Charles, author of the bestselling book "The Paris Library."
40:22 - Moderated discussion and Q&A with invited guests by Pauline Lemasson, Development Chair of AAWE.
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About the book
In August 1949, Jacqueline Bouvier arrives in postwar Paris to begin her junior year abroad as a Smith College student. She’s twenty years old, socially poised but financially precarious. Jacqueline is immediately catapulted into an intoxicating new world of champagne and châteaux, art and avant-garde theater, cafés and jazz clubs. But beneath the glitter and rush, France is a fragile place still haunted by WWII and the Occupation. Jacqueline lives in a rambling apartment with a widowed countess and her daughters, all of whom suffered as having been part of the French Resistance just a few years before. Evocative, sensitive, and rich in historic detail, Ann Mah's novel brilliantly imagines the intellectual and aesthetic awakening of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, illuminating how France would prove to be her one true love, and one of the greatest influences on her life. It was chosen by the US Embassy Paris CLO Book of the Month Club for November 2022.
Hosted by Columbia Global Centers | Paris, Smith College Paris, and the Smith College Club of France with the partnership of the U.S. Embassy Community Liason Office (CLO), the Association of American Women in Europe (AAWE), INSPIRELLE, and The American Library in Paris.
The place
This event will take place in the Grande Salle Ginsberg-LeClerc, built at Reid Hall in 1912 and extensively renovated in 2023 thanks to the generous support of Judith Ginsberg and Paul LeClerc.
For nearly sixty years, Columbia University students and faculty have come to study, teach, or pursue their research at Reid Hall, an exceptional space in the world of international education and cultural exchange. Our public events draw on the rich resources of the Columbia campus and our local partners, creating a "third space" of intellectual exploration and research that resists easy categorization. Our workshops, lectures, and performances bring together a diverse audience to address pressing issues through creative, rigorous, and open dialogue.
Today, Reid Hall is home to several Columbia University initiatives: Columbia Global Centers | Paris, Columbia Undergraduate Programs, M.A. in History and Literature, Columbia’s architecture program, and the Institute for Ideas and Imagination. This unique combination of resources is enhanced by our global network whose mission is to expand the University's engagement the world over through educational programs, research collaborations, regional partnerships, and public events.
The views and opinions expressed by speakers and guests do not necessarily reflect the official policies or positions of Columbia Global Centers | Paris or its affiliates.