Item
Smith College Commencement Illumination Night
Title (Dublin Core)
Smith College Commencement Illumination Night
Description (Dublin Core)
One of my favorite traditions during commencement weekend at Smith College, my alma mater, is Illumination Night. The school turns off all the lights on campus and strings illuminated Japanese lanterns along all the paths, and everyone walks through them in hushed tones. This year an alumna had the idea to ask alumnae to create their own “lanterns,” photograph them, and upload the photos to social media. This is a selection of a few of them. The school also created an interactive map that shows the lanterns spread across the globe — you can click on a site and see the photos uploaded from that location.
I teach in New York City and had just flown down to New Orleans for spring break when the country went on lockdown. I’ve been quarantining in a friend’s empty apartment here since then, and there aren’t a lot of supplies on hand. So for my own lantern, I just took a paper bag from the supermarket, turned it inside out to hide the logo, used an X-Acto knife to cut the words “my sister” out from it (Smith is a women’s college), and put a few candles inside. Somehow using my hands to make something personal for the graduates made me feel more connected to them than I would have felt had there been an actual Illumination Night — the difference between creating something and merely receiving it.
That said, my heart goes out to all graduates everywhere who didn’t get to celebrate their accomplishments with their loved ones. Seeing different alumnae’s lanterns was touching and inspiring, but there’s nothing like a shared space or a simple embrace.
I teach in New York City and had just flown down to New Orleans for spring break when the country went on lockdown. I’ve been quarantining in a friend’s empty apartment here since then, and there aren’t a lot of supplies on hand. So for my own lantern, I just took a paper bag from the supermarket, turned it inside out to hide the logo, used an X-Acto knife to cut the words “my sister” out from it (Smith is a women’s college), and put a few candles inside. Somehow using my hands to make something personal for the graduates made me feel more connected to them than I would have felt had there been an actual Illumination Night — the difference between creating something and merely receiving it.
That said, my heart goes out to all graduates everywhere who didn’t get to celebrate their accomplishments with their loved ones. Seeing different alumnae’s lanterns was touching and inspiring, but there’s nothing like a shared space or a simple embrace.
Date (Dublin Core)
May 15, 2020
Creator (Dublin Core)
Casey Ruble
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Casey Ruble
Type (Dublin Core)
photograph
text
Link (Bibliographic Ontology)
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=9633e5e7f90b487ba5f4d106997c0aee
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
English
Education--Universities
English
Events
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
Smith College
teacher
Class of 2020
New York City
New Orleans
Louisiana
New York
Contributor's Tags (a true folksonomy) (Friend of a Friend)
Smith College
Smith Illuminates
Collection (Dublin Core)
Lost Graduations
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
06/12/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
06/19/2020
11/11/2020
04/02/2021
Item sets
Linked resources
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Title | Alternate label | Class |
---|---|---|
Handwashing Station at Faubourg Wines New Orleans | Link | Image |
This item was submitted on June 12, 2020 by Casey Ruble using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: https://covid-19archive.org/s/archive
Click here to view the collected data.