During a virtual event marking the culmination of the 50WAY150 initiative, Foster called on Yale students and alumnae to “claim ownership of your education.”
Jodie Foster during a visit to Yale in 2009.
When Jodie Foster ’84 B.A. first arrived on the Yale campus as an undergraduate student in 1980 —“on a warm August day in dolphin shorts” — she hoped that no one would notice she didn’t belong.
“I wasn’t smart enough, deep enough, or preppy enough to belong,” she said. In other words, she said, she suffered from “imposter syndrome,” the internalized fear of being outed as a fraud. But, added Foster, “in this imposter’s case, it became a motivating factor.”
Foster, the critically acclaimed, multiple Academy Award-winning actress — whose films include “The Accused,” “Silence of the Lambs,” “Taxi Driver,” and “Panic Room,” among many others — on Sept. 24 opened a three-day virtual event marking the culmination of the 50WomenAtYale150 initiative, a year-long celebration of 50 years of coeducation in Yale College and 150 years of women at Yale. Details here.
Foster called on Yale students and alumnae to “claim ownership of your education” rather than just receive it. “When you challenge your institution, it becomes alive,” she said.
It was that radical spirit to not only be part of Yale but to shape a new, more inclusive Yale, that guided the university’s first women students, she noted, first in the graduate schools, and then at Yale College. “This was the beginning of a new era,” she said. “Let it be known that this place will grow and change.” These trailblazing early women, said Foster, “listened to the call of longing for purpose and the beautiful call of belonging.”
News
*That’s* How They’re Writing Him Off?!? Blue Bloods’ Final Season Sets the Stage For Danny’s Devastating End
Credit: Getty Images All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Soaps.com may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes. With only five more…
Matthew McConaughey honors his late father James with throwback photo: ‘Made men fathers’
Matthew McConaughey took to social media on Sunday to acknowledge Father’s Day. The 52-year-old actor shared a throwback photo with several older men and wrote: ‘made men fathers. #fathersday.’ His dad, James Donald McConaughey, passed away in 1992 when the star…
Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey? Reexamines One of the Biggest Cold Cases in History
On Dec. 26, 1996, John and Patsy Ramsey awoke to a nightmare. Their youngest child, 6-year-old JonBenét Ramsey, was missing, with a chilling ransom note left behind. The day took a devastating turn when John Ramsey discovered JonBenét’s lifeless body…
Allison Janney Says She ‘Threw the Script Across the Room’ for The Diplomat Season 2 Finale
Allison Janney. Photo: Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Allison Janney is revealing how she reacted to seeing one specific script for The Diplomat. During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Nov. 4, Janney, 64, explained that when she first read the script for the political thriller’s season…
Inside The Lincoln Lawyer cast’s real-life romances: Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Neve Campbell, Becki Newton and more
The Lincoln Lawyer promises plenty of drama both in the courtroom and out but offscreen the stars of the show live regular lives with their loved ones. The romantic complexities on the legal Netflix series aren’t reflected in their real-life…
The Ending of ‘The Diplomat’ Season 2, Explained: Breaking Down Who Planned the Attack and the Shocking Death
(Image credit: Courtesy of Netflix) Season 2 of Netflix’s political thriller The Diplomat begins with a bang—literally. Created by The West Wing alum Debora Cahn and starring Keri Russell, the series follows the titular diplomat Kate Wyler (Russell) as she’s appointed ambassador to the United…
End of content
No more pages to load