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Culture Club now open to all

1st March 2024 By GerryBurke

Culture Club is one of the new activities for Members and friends of Christians on Ageing .

It is now OPEN TO ALL.

Christians on Ageing’s Culture Club provides light relief from our core activities.  It provides a venue for discussion of films, books, poems, TV and radio programmes which throw an interesting and provocative light on the depiction of older people in the arts.

Meetings, free of charge and open to anybody, whether a member of Christians on Ageing or not, take place via Zoom between 1.30 pm and 3 pm on Friday afternoons every two months. Each has a focus on a particular theme.  For example, the meeting scheduled for March 8th 2024, will be exploring ‘Intergenerational Relationships’.  How will that be done?

  • We plan to refer to George Elliot’s well-known novel Silas Marner, the Pixar classic Up (in which a cantankerous widower teams up with an eager junior scout on an adventurous mission to South America), and Hemmingway’s best-known work, about an old man, a young boy and a big fish – The Old Man and The Sea. Participants may well draw our attention to other relevant books, poems, films or TV or radio programmes.

Meetings later in 2024:

10 May 2024: Life in a care home

Away From Her – Julie Christie won an Oscar for this 2006 drama about a woman with Alzheimer’s who begins a relationship with a man in a care home, having forgotten about her husband.

Alive Inside – a documentary about people with dementia responding to music.
Quartet – Maggie Smith stars in Dustin Hoffman’s comedy about a retirement home for classical musicians.

Savages – two children (Laura Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman) decide to put their father, who has Parkinson’s, in a nursing home.

The Great Escaper – Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson star in this 2023 film based on the true-life story of a veteran who steals out of his care home to attend the D-Day landing celebrations in France.

12 July 2024: Past depictions of old age

Memento Mori – Muriel Spark’s darkly amusing whodunnit amongst sitting room-dwelling friends in 60s London bespeaks a world totally lost yet for many, still in living memory.

Ending Up – Kingsley Amis’s comic classic about bickering upper class acquaintances conjures that genteel Edwardian sense of retired gentlemen and spinsters which persisted well into the 1970s, yet has since become tainted with more seediness and depression.

The Ladykillers – Mrs Wilberforce, a redoubtable relic from the late Victorian age, unwittingly outsmarts Alec Guiness’s gang of dastardly criminals. The scene in which the mob must make nice while she has friends round for tea, cake and a sing-song is remarkable.

Fawlty Towers – That Miss Tibbs and Miss Gadsby happily lived out their final years in a Torquay guesthouse did not seem odd in the mid-1970s. Today, they would be the subject of keen interest and pity.

13 September 2024: Relationships between children and elderly parents

The Tempest – if you think getting older is tough, wait till you tell your children about inheritance, as Shakespeare reminds us.

The Book Club – in this film, four friends in their 70s and 80s embark on new romantic partnerships – often to the chagrin of their children.

Elizabeth is Missing – BBC drama in which Glenda Jackson’s daughter is disbelieving and even scornful when her mother, who suffers from dementia, begins to solve the disappearance of her sister 70 years before.

8 November 2024: Self-help

How to Live to 100 – Jon Snow’s popular Channel 4 documentary managed to attractive audiences from younger demographics by extending an upbeat travelogue treatment to questions of mortality and uncaring relatives.

The many guides to living well in later life.

All the amusing and not so amusing lighthearted “senior moment” compendiums.

_________________________________________________

 

We usually choose films and programmes which can be watched for free on YouTube, BBC iPlayer, ITV X or Channel Four Player. However, it is not essential that attenders watch films in full beforehand, while some information about them can be gleaned from trailers and reviews. Writer and lecturer on older people’s issues Marion Shoard chairs Culture Club, while Catherine Shoard, the film editor at The Guardian, informs our discussions on films.

If you would like to join a meeting, contact Christians on Ageing’s Honorary Secretary, Barbara Stephens, at secretary@christiansonageing.org.uk or 147 High Street, Ryde PO33 2RE, who will send you the Zoom link. If you do not have access to a digital facility and would like to join instead by phone, please let Barbara know.

 

For further information about Culture Club, contact Marion Shoard at marion@marionshoard.co.uk or P O Box 195, Edenbridge, Kent, TN8 9EF.

Filed Under: NEWS

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Speaking Out

There are some things which just have to be said.  We have to speak out because at the heart of the Christian message is our belief that God is not silent.  God has spoken through creation itself and the evolving universe; through the human story; through the dwelling of Jesus Christ in time; through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the Church and in each believer; through the inspiration of the scriptures; and through the wisdom and the teaching of the Church through the ages.

We use words all the time.  Words of welcome.  Words of wisdom.  Words of warmth.  Words of warning.  Words of wistfulness.  Our words are wasted if words are just words.   In the beginning was the Word.  And the Word was with God.  And the Word was God.  Through him all things came to be, not one thing had its being but through him.   The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. The Word made things happen.

As Christians, as followers of the Word, we do something about what we have heard.  Our own best words are our actions.

Please tell us what you would like us to Speak Out about by contacting:  info@ccoa.org.uk

 

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Ms Barbara Stephens
Honorary Secretary
Christians on Ageing
147 High Street,
Ryde
PO33 2RE

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