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The School of Life - Wikipedia & Website

The School of Life - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Min website: The School of Life - Good Ideas for Everyday Life

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The School of Life is a social enterprise founded in 2008 and based in a small shop in Central London. The School offers a variety of programmes and services concerned with how to live wisely and well, addressing such questions as why work is often unfulfilling, why relationships can be so challenging, why it’s ever harder to stay calm and what one could do to try to change the world for the better.[1] The School also offers psychotherapy and bibliotherapy services and runs a small shop which has been described as 'an apothecary for the mind'.[2]

The School of Life is not affiliated to any religious, educational, charitable or other organisations. It declares itself a place ‘free from dogma’, where participants are ‘directed towards a variety of ideas - from philosophy to literature, psychology to the visual arts – that tickle, exercise and expand your mind’ and where participants can 'meet other curious, sociable and open-minded people in an atmosphere of exploration and enjoyment'.[1]

Contents


People

The School of Life was founded by philosopher Alain de Botton, with the help of Sophie Howarth, a former curator of Tate Modern, in collaboration with a number of writers, artists and educators. It is currently staffed by Morgwn Rimel (Director), Harriet Warden, Caroline Brimmer and Angharad Davies. The faculty includes philosophers Mark Vernon, Robert Rowland Smith and Nigel Warburton, writers Tom Hodgkinson, Charles Fernyhough, John-Paul Flintoff, Catherine Blyth and Rebecca Abrams. Ambassadors for the project include Alain de Botton, photographer Martin Parr, psychotherapist Brett Kahr, journalist Rosie Boycott and publishers Patrick Walsh, Toby Mundy and Simon Prosser.


Classes

The School of Life offers evening classes and workshops which are designed to provide useful insights around the big themes in life.[3] These might explore ways to improve relationships or find more satisfaction in one's working life, or even how to be cool.[4] These classes are devised by leading authors, artists, actors and academics, combining their own experiences with ideas from great thinkers of the past to offer participants intelligent and playful ways to interpret the world, and their place within it.[3]


Weekends

The School offers weekends led by writers, artists, economists and scientists to create extraordinary experiences designed to inspire personal journeys, during which participants can learn a new skill or address a particular issue in more depth while providing an opportunity for stimulating reflection and sociable exploration. Topics which have inspired some weekends include photography, reading and finding fulfilment through one's work.[5]


Meals

The School regularly hosts evening meals in Central London restaurants along with a Breakfast Club at its Marchmont Street store.[6] Those attending are usually strangers who get to know one another by discussing topics on the 'conversation menu'. According to Time Out London 'there are tasks to accomplish, aphorisms to discuss with the aperitif, questions to bat across the table with a stranger through dinner, postcards to ponder over dessert.'


Sermons

On Sunday mornings The School of Life hosts secular sermons in which cultural figures are invited to give their opinion about 'what values we should live by today'.[7] These theatrical events are usually held at Conway Hall in London. Past preachers have included Tom Hodgkinson on Loving Your Neighbour, Geoff Dyer on Punctuality, Sam Roddick on Seduction and Alain de Botton on Pessimism.[8] The Financial Times described the sermons as being 'hedged about with all sorts of ironic paraphernalia, designed to reassure the trendy young audience that they are not about to be harangued by a religious zealot'.[9]


Bibliotherapy

The School of Life offers a literary consultation service it calls bibliotherapy.[10] For a fee, people are able to meet with a bibliotherapist who will talk to them about their reading habits and 'prescribe' books which relate to their interests or concerns. The School of Life's bibliotherapists include the novelist Susan Elderkin.


Psychotherapy

The School operates a psychotherapy service run by Professor Brett Kahr, one of Britain’s foremost psychotherapists. Professor Kahr is Senior Clinical Research Fellow in Psychotherapy and Mental Health at the Centre for Child Mental Health in London. He is also a Visiting Clinician and Visiting Lecturer at the Tavistock Centre for Couple Relationships, at the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology in London, specialising in work with marital couples. He is also a registrant of the British Psychoanalytic Council.
The service is described as offering clients 'a fascinating and valuable tour of your own psyche'[11] and aims to counter the stigma often associated with mental health.


Shop

The School is based in a small shop on Marchmont Street in Central London. The interior is designed by Susanna Edwards and Joseph Harries and features real silver birch trees.[12] The shop sells a small number of books and gifts and displays information about all The School of Life's programmes and services. Beneath the shop is the School's classroom muraled throughout by the British fashion illustrator Charlotte Mann.


References

  1. ^ a b [1][dead link]
  2. ^ "The School of Life [Monocle]". Monocle.com. 2008-09-03. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  3. ^ a b "Classes". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  4. ^ "Sunday Express Magazine". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  5. ^ "Weekends". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  6. ^ "Meals at The School of Life". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  7. ^ "Sermons". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  8. ^ "Past Sermons". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  9. ^ Eyres, Harry (2008-12-20). "Secular lessons from the School of Life". FT.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  10. ^ "Bibliotherapy". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  11. ^ "Psychotherapy". Theschooloflife.com. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  12. ^ "Blog Archive » The School of Life by Susanna Edwards". Dezeen. 2008-09-26. Retrieved 2012-03-22.


External links