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Dean's Tea: The Color of Contemplation with Sophfronia Scott

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Speaker/Lecture Series

Tue, Jan 27, 2026

4:30 PM – 6 PM EST (GMT-5)

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The contemplative life is essential to grasping the wholeness that may heal divides. But what if contemplation means different things and looks like a different ideal in groups of various races and cultures? Does that mean our spirituality will always separate us? Does that mean we’re reaching for a unity that will always be beyond our reach?

Author and spiritual writer Sophfronia Scott joins the YDS community for an engaging discussion. All are welcome.

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Sophfronia Scott's profile photo

Sophfronia Scott

Novelist and Essayist

Sophfronia Scott is a novelist, essayist, and leading contemplative thinker whose work has received a 2020 Artist Fellowship Grant from the Connecticut Office of the Arts. Her book The Seeker and the Monk: Everyday Conversations with Thomas Merton won the 2021 Thomas Merton “Louie” Award from the International Thomas Merton Society. She grew up in Lorain, Ohio, a hometown she shares with author Toni Morrison. She holds a BA in English from Harvard and an MFA in writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She began her career as an award-winning magazine journalist for Time, where she co-authored the groundbreaking cover story “Twentysomething,” the first study identifying the demographic group known as Generation X, and People. When her first novel, All I Need to Get By, was published by St. Martin’s Press in 2004 Sophfronia was nominated for best new author at the African American Literary Awards and hailed by Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. as “potentially one of the best writers of her generation.”


Her latest book is the bestselling Wild, Beautiful, and Free, a historical novel set during the Civil War. Sophfronia’s other books include Unforgivable Love, Love’s Long Line, Doing Business By the Book, and This Child of Faith: Raising a Spiritual Child in a Secular World, co-written with her son Tain. Her essays, short stories, and articles have appeared in numerous publications including Yankee Magazine, The Christian Century, North American Review, NewYorkTimes.com, and O, The Oprah Magazine. Her essays “Hope On Any Given Day,” “The Legs On Which I Move,” and “Why I Didn’t Go to the Firehouse” are listed among the Notables in the Best American Essays series.

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