Trinity Tales: Trinity College Dublin in the Nineties Heaney Catherine
Like its three predecessors, this fourth instalment of Trinity Tales gathers together recollections of a decade at Trinity College Dublin. This time, the story is taken up by 1990s graduates- those…
Specifikacia Trinity Tales: Trinity College Dublin in the Nineties Heaney Catherine
Like its three predecessors, this fourth instalment of Trinity Tales gathers together recollections of a decade at Trinity College Dublin. This time, the story is taken up by 1990s graduates- those who passed through its gates as the twentieth century drew to a close-and, through the forty individual voices assembled here, a vivid portrait emerges of student life during those transformative years. Trinity students at the decade's end had email, mobile phones and the vast resources of the Internet at their disposal. In addition, they were relatively debt-free (undergraduate tuition fees having been abolished in 1996) and every bit as likely to stay and find work in Ireland as to get on the first flight to London or New York. Reflecting this sense of rapid growth, new buildings started springing up around campus, most notably the Samuel Beckett Centre and Goldsmith Hall, and as the