Tuesday, 14 December 2021

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ENTERTAINING & EDUCATIONAL EVENTS IN SUSSEX UK - FUN AS WELL AS FACTUAL
KEEP VISITING THIS SITE FOR REGULAR UPDATES -DETAILS OF VENUES BOTTOM OF PAGE 
 Check venues, fees, dates before booking - accurate as possible, but may change, be postponed or cancelled. 

> 2022  <
** ADULT EDUCATION COURSES ** 
(For other events, please scroll down to end)

DETAILS OF MY HISTORY COURSES AT BRIGHTON METROPOLITAN COLLEGE (MET):
https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-part-time

KEEP CHECKING HERE FOR ANY COVID UPDATES 

   

TAUGHT AT PELHAM STREET CAMPUS, BRIGHTON: 1A Pelham Street, BN2
E: admissions-brighton@gbmc.ac.uk
Tel 01273 667704/667788
🙋🙋
For enquiries about Adult and Leisure courses at GBMET please e-mail Admissions@gbmc.ac.uk and they will get back to you as soon as possible.
Or, telephone 01273 667704 (lines are very busy right now but if no reply you can leave a voicemail)

COVID PRECAUTIONS:  ALTHOUGH NO LONGER MANDATORY, FACE COVERINGS MAY BE WORN IF  YOU WISH TO IN CLASSROOMS  AND PUBLIC AREAS. DISTANCING REMAINS BETWEEN TABLES.  WINDOWS ARE KEPT OPEN. . SANITIZERS AT ENTRANCE AND IN ALL CLASSROOMS. 

COVID-10 RAPID TESTING SHOULD E CARRIED OUT WEEKLY AT HOME  AND PRIOR TO ATTENDING CLASS. POSITIVE RESULTS SENT TO NHS, THE COLLEGE AND TUTOR. DO NOT ATTEND CLASS IF YOU HAVE COVID OR SYMPTOMSTESTING IS NOT MANDATORY. FREE KITS AVAILABLE FROM RECEPTION.


    🍃    SPRING 2022   🍃   

 SINGLE SATURDAY AT MET PELHAM STREET  CAMPUS, BRIGHTON

LOOKING AT VICTORIAN ART - PAINTINGS AS SOCIAL HISTORY


The fascinating, colourful Victorian narrative and figurative paintings tell us much more than the main picture and are full of symbolism and meaning, exposing other features hardly noticed: revealing massive social, economic and cultural changes, turmoil and emotions.

We study later Victorian artists who wanted to show domestic scenes and ‘real life’ and were not afraid of painting controversial subjects which might shock the public. Paintings, such as the large William Powell Frith’s Derby Day were so popular when they were shown that a rail was needed to stop the public from getting too close to the pictures and damaging them.

Domestic scenes showed interiors of everyday life which appealed to the public. Dickens and Elizabeth Gaskell chose to use fiction to expose social conditions in a way that fired the reader’s interest and enabled them to become aware and to discuss, maybe act. Artists attempted to expose conditions by painting them realistically rather than making the subjects beautiful. Some took a moral stance, and the fallen woman was a popular subject.      

Illustrated with masses of Victorian paintings on powerpoint slidehows.

 SATURDAY 12 MARCH  11am-3pm   Ref No: CL0669-1C Fee £28

https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-looking-at-victorian-art-paintings-as-social-history-brighton-metleisure


Varndean College at
         The Church of the Holy Cross, Downsway, Woodingdean (Brighton) BN2 6BD        
                           (Buses 2, 2A, 22, 22A stop outside, car park across road outside library) 

         Covid Precautions: distancing at tables. Sanitizer available. Face covering to be worn in public areas, and in classroom if you wish. Windows and door kept open.
A Grand Tour of Regency Indulgence

We study social, domestic, cultural and working life for all classes in an age of elegant living, the arts and literature. The Industrial Revolution inspired exciting new ideas, innovators, inventors, original thinkers and advances in science and technology. The period was also a time of great poverty, disease, illness and vice.

6 weeks 10.00 - 12.00 - Start 21 February*

Fee £75 £25 (Concessions)  Enrol: 01273 546604  

*Please note new start date    


                          >>> ONLINE: (Zoom) <<<                        

                                   for Sussex School of  Archaeology and History:                            

        The Victorian World:

 Life, Death, Work and Leisure in  Nineteenth Century England : Part II

We study the worlds of wealthy, middle and working class - from large country estates and town houses to humble cottages and London rookeries of the residuum; their social and cultural life, living and working conditions. We see the strict hierarchy which existed “below stairs” and domestic life of servants and their duties in large houses. Course themes include the poor and their lack of amenities, deficient nutrition and medical attention and effect of their appalling lives. One session will be on the fascinating rituals of death and mourning (not morbid). 

 5 weeks, Wednesday evening 7pm  Start 2 March

         Course code: VIC Fee £45

                 Enrol:  https://www.sussexarchaeology.org/about-3-1

T: 01323 811785   info@sussexarchaeology.co.uk



Courses currently running:
The Novel as Social HistoryLife, Work, Leisure and Love    
Unique course comprising literature, social and cultural history, book club – and lively discussion!  Within the pages of the novel we discover more than a story - enthralling  ‘other’ information about people, relationships, class and place.
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Within every piece of fiction is a wealth of information on culture and social life which can lead us into a deeper understanding of a subject, time or place, period in history, genre, working conditions, habits, style or social trend that we might pursue further, or deepen our knowledge and intensify our interest.
   .
   5 Fortnightly Saturdays start 15 January 11am-1pm  FULL (see below)
     Sessions: 15 & 29 Jan, 12 Feb, 05 & 19 Mar Ref CL0030-1C  Fee £65
*https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/the-novel-as-social-history-life-work-leisure-brighton-metleisure
Due to popular demand this course is being repeated. 
Details as above, start 22 January 11am-1pm, then following Saturdays 1.30-3.30pm
Sessions: 22 & 29 Jan, 12 Feb, 05 & 19 Mar  Ref CL0699-1C Fee £65

The Victorian World 1851-1875 
Rich and poor and their world: their architecture and living conditions - from large country estates and town houses to humble cottages and town rookeries of the residuum; their social life, culture and the impact of influential women.  
  We study how dwellings were built and furnished and view the internal workings of the home. There was a strict hierarchy which existed “below stairs” which was far more snobbish than that between master and servant. The domestic life of the servant, their duties, wages and relationship with the houses in which they worked is a fascinating one. Mrs. Beeton was the Delia Smith of her day and introduced technology into household management. 

Other course themes include the poor, their lack of amenities, deficient nutrition and medical attention and the effect of their appalling living and working conditions. We also see how campaigning women made a difference, such as Barbara Bodichon who wrote “Women and Work” which argued that a married women's dependence on her husband was degrading. We also reflect on the colourful world of William Morris and the Arts & Crafts Movement.

 Illustrated with PowerPoint slideshows, images and texts.
10 weeks Mondays 1.30-3.30pm start 17 January
 Ref CL0059-1C  Fee £131  ONE PLACE REMAINING
https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-the-victorian-world-1851-1875-brighton-metleisure


MET course at WHITEHAWK INN
Brighton BN2 5NS (buses stop outside)
 Covid Precautions: distancing at tables. Window and door open. Sanitizer available. Face covering is to be worn in public areas, and in classroom if you wish. Pre-ordered refreshments will be brought into classroom by staff. 
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Women: Wartime, the Homefront and Post-war Britain

For those who are interested in women’s studies and what life was like for them at work and in the home during the second world war, and post-war (late1940s & 50s); when lives and conditions had changed considerably

We study life for women at war and on the homefront: their occupations in the armed services, as pilots, nurses, typists, clerks; working in the Land Army, in factories, in the WRVS and other voluntary organisations, as well as being housewives and mothers. At home during war and after, women had to cope with rationing and learning to ‘make do and mend’ while attempting to remain glamorous keeping up with fashion and cosmetics.

When war ended women found it difficult to give up their new independence. Family life changed and so did relationships. We investigate social and cultural changes that followed the upheavals of World War 2, including architecture, housing, living and working conditions, relationships, fashion, books, cinema and public health - such as the forming of the NHS in 1948. We also focus on changes for women and the adjustments to their domestic, social and family life following the war.

Illustrated with PowerPoint slideshows,and documentary film.

10 weeks Wednesday start 19 January 1-3pm  Ref CL0618 -1C Fee A £20 B £10 (Benefits) FULL

https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-women-wwii-home-front-and-post-war-britain-brighton-met

                     

MET PELHAM STREET CAMPUS, BRIGHTON:

The Edwardians: A Golden Age (1900-1910)
We study the short ‘Golden Age’ before ‘the black pit of war’ (J.B. Priestley’s description) that was to change the idyll of elegant living for the wealthy socialising on a grand scale, but was also a tarnished age for the poor living in slums. We compare domestic, social and cultural life, including how paintings and literature depicted society. Includes house tours above and below stairs.

Illustrated with powerpoint slideshows, books, prints, paintings     and texts.

8 weeks Tuesday 11am-1pm Start 25 January   ef CL0081-1C Fee £105   

https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-the-edwardians-a-golden-age-1900-1914-brighton-metleisure

A History of Fashion and Society 1700-2000  

 This course is for lovers of fashion and British social and  cultural history. It examines how social history has inspired fashion, just as clothes have influenced social and cultural history. 

We examine how the social and cultural background of  the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries influenced British fashion then and now; focussing on aspects of trendsetting fashion such as the voluminous and extravagant court dresses of the eighteenth century and the dandy; Victorian crinoline, bustle and aestheticism; Edwardian art nouveau, elegant art deco era, wartime recycling, swinging sixties, and subculture of mods, rockers, goths, skinheads and punks. 

 You will learn how to read fashion and how informs us us and what your clothes say about you. We will examine key style developments and designers such as Mary Quant and the "Swinging Sixties". A really exciting and fascinating course that will make you think differently about style, clothing and what you and others wear.

Illustrated with masses of fashion illustrations and powerpoint slideshows.

8 weeks start Tuesday 1.30-3.30pm Start 25 January Ref CL0276-1C Fee £105  2 places remaining

https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/a-history-of-fashion-and-society-1700-2000-brighton-metleisure        

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🌞   SUMMER 2022   🌞  
Courses start  April   
TAUGHT AT PELHAM STREET CAMPUS, BRIGHTON:
E: admissions-brighton@gbmc.ac.uk
T: 01273 667788

 Victorian Life and Leisure 1851-1875 
The family, work, leisure, travel, art and culture.  This period saw the burgeoning “leisure industry”: holidays - particularly the seaside – travel to the countryside, and in the new green spaces of the town as public parks were opened for all to enjoy and benefit.

We study improvements in working hours and conditions but still long and continuous toil for the poor and an unhealthy urban environment with little time off. But, society was changing and we explore the urban and rural environment and the importance of getting to the countryside for a day out, and for green spaces near industrial areas.  

1871 gave people a few days off. Holidays for all. The seaside was particularly popular and where people cast off inhibitions. There were tea gardens serving beer and wine, dancing, fireworks, travelling fairs, circus, theatre, music hall, Gilbert and Sullivan and sport.

 Illustrated with powerpoint slides, images and texts.

6 weeks Mondays 1.30-3.30pm start 25 April

Ref CL0028-1C  Fee £78  3 places remaining
https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-victorians-brighton-metleisure


 Art Deco and the ‘Moderne’  (1918-1939)

After WWI a new, distinctive style emerged, 1920-1930's. Smooth lines and geometric patterns featured on glass,  ceramics, jewellery, furniture, lighting, metalware, fashion, architecture, advertising, technology and cinema.
.
 
The smoothly distinctive ‘Modernist’ style dominated all aspects of domestic and cultural life and was notable for its architectural and design features. The iconic, elegant style was used to furnish homes in a new and exciting fashion, utilizing modern technology and materials, and electrical devices.

Illustrated with powerpoint slideshows, film and documentary.

6 weeks Tuesday 7-9pm start 26 April  
Ref: CL0068-1C  Fee £76
https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/world-of-iconic-art-deco-brighton-metleisure

ROTTINGDEAN WHITEWAY CENTRE,

Whiteway Lane, Rottingdean (Brighton) BN2 7HB

  Covid Precautions: distancing at tables. Sanitizer available. Face covering is to be worn in public areas, and in classroom if you wish. Windows and doors kept open.

Buses stop on seafront outside White Horse Inn, and no. 2 in the High Street

Culture and Society Between-the-Wars (1918-1939)

We see how life changed in Britain after WWI. There was decline but social and cultural life took on a new aspect reflected in architecture, design, fashion, music, literature and distinctive style of Art Deco and Modernism.

 We study the culture of "Live for today" during the interwar yeas following the horrors of war.  Cinema-going was extremely popular and film influenced peoples' lives in many ways including what they wore. Young women cut their hair short in a 'bob', wore cosmetics, smoked and shortened their skirts in order to dance the Charleston - just like their liberated screen idols.

Illustrated with powerpoint slideshows, film and documentary. 

6 weeks Tuesday 1-3pm Start 26 April

Booking details will follow.  Enquiries: enrolments@rwc.org.uk   

   

MET course at WHITEHAWK INN

Brighton BN2 5NS (buses stop outside)

The History of Brighton – a unique resort 

We discover the special features of Brighton's unique development - from early life on the Downs to vibrant twentieth-century.  We view how a small, poor fishing town emerged into a fashionable resort. We will explore Brighton's rich architectural heritage, considering how this impacted on the social life of the town and how buildings such as theatres, cinemas and skating rinks helped to mould its image, as well as the many shops, factories and other industries. 

Cultural life in Brighton has always featured highly in the town’s history, from theatre and music hall, to racing and cinema-going. Dance halls and cinemas played a part in the town’s wartime history. Wartime impacted highly on a resort renowned for entertainment and accommodating many visitors who were looking to enjoy the piers, palace and bracing sea air. We will study other aspects of the town’s life, such as poverty and slum housing and how rapid expansion causes problems as well as prosperity.

10 weeks Wednesday start 27 April 
1-3pm

 Ref CL0671  -1C Fee A £20 B £10 (Benefits)    2 places remaining

 https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-a-unique-resort-brighton-met-leisure


Summer 2022 Saturday courses

🌞  Summer Reading: Books, books and more books!  🌞
Unique course comprising literature and social and cultural history.
Books for summer reading - recommendations, discussion, background social history... and novels to read before class. If you like books, literature and social history – this is for you!  A different, unusual, exciting way of reading and learning in a friendly, relaxed group. We also view extracts of two of the novels that were made into films.
A reading list is available from the tutor and you will be expected to participate in group discussion. 

Single Saturday 30 April 10am-4pm 
 Ref CL0067-1C Fee £25 
https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-summer-reading-met-leisure

           Summer in the City: exploring Brighton's unique history 
(2 classroom sessions and 3 Brighton field trips)
We study the fascinating history of Brighton in two classroom sessions with a brief historical overview and looking at early maps. This will be followed by three field trips, getting to know our unique city, discovering lots of hidden gems and understanding how Brighton evolved from a small Georgian fishing town to the vibrant seaside resort of today.  Classroom sessions illustrated with images, maps and powerpoint slides                                                  
         5 weeks Saturday 11am-1pm start 7 May   
        Ref: CL0027-1C  Fee: £68            

  https://www.gbmc.ac.uk/history-exploring-brightons-history-metleisure 

                 
      Varndean College at The Church of the Holy Cross,                                         Downsway, Woodingdean (Brighton) BN2 6BD   
             (Buses 2, 2A, 22, 22A stop outside, car park across road outside library)
  
Introducing the Victorians

An introduction into the world of the remarkable and influential Victorian period which spanned 64 years and saw many changes and advances, opening up spheres of communication, travel and consumerism, especially after the Great Exhibition of 1851. 

 6 weeks Monday 10.00 - 12.00 - May start date to be announced

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                   AUTUMN 2022

ROTTINGDEAN WHITEWAY CENTRE,

Whiteway Lane, Rottingdean (Brighton) BN2 7HB

Nearby car park on seafront road. Buses stop on seafront outside White Horse Inn, and no. 2 in the High Street

     TALK: "The Whiplash Curve" Art Nouveau and Iconic Geometric Art Deco

The flowing, curvaceous lines of Victorian Art Nouveau, followed by and compared with the interwar geometrical style of iconic Art Deco.

Art Nouveau was organic, using elements found in nature e.g. flowers, insects and trees. Its style was sensual with whiplash lines, tendrils of hair and sprouting vines, creating an asymmetrical and fanciful appearance. In comparison, iconic Art Deco style was geometric. It was associated with the Jazz Age, so was also described as "jazzy". It utilised modern technology and innovations, such as plastic, chrome, aluminium and electricity. The smooth, regular patterns were found in everything from art to fashion, furniture, light fittings, ornaments, glass, ceramics and jewellery. Its elegance furnished homes in a new, exciting fashion and hugely influenced cinema: facades, interiors, film sets and costumes. Both styles were innovative and daring, emerging from earlier influences – Egyptian being a major feature of Art Deco.

Illustrated with hundreds of colourful slides,

Saturday 26 November 2022 10.30am-12.45pm  Fee: £10
Enquiries and to register interest: enrolments@rwc.org.uk 

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  OTHER EVENTS

These events were due to run 2020/21 but due to the pandemic, have been postponed until 2022. 

 Study day at the West Pier Centre

Patrick Hamilton’s “The West Pier” 
followed by cocktails or tea at Metropole Hotel

We study social, cultural, local and West Pier history, characters and events within Patrick Hamilton’s excellent novel, followed by tea at the Hotel Metropole. 

Morning session will be followed by a short seafront tour. Bring a packed lunch to eat on the beach or forecourt - or several cafes nearby. After our afternoon session we will go across the road to the Metropole Hotel for afternoon tea or cocktails. The hotel features in the novel.  

Illustrated with powerpoint slideshow. Please read short novel before the session.

Fee £28 (plus booking fee)   
(Does not include refreshments at the Metropole for which  you pay separately. Cocktails from £9, cup of tea £2.90, full afternoon tea £24 - two can share - Hotel suggests two afternoon teas shared by three - with additional cups of tea)  
 Book via EventBrite:

Lecturer and guide is ex-West Pier tour guide

June, July, August dates tba  
Enquiries: 01273 321499 or info@westpier.co.uk

INFORMATION WILL BE POSTED HERE OR YOU CAN CONTACT ME.  Limited places.


A cream coloured terrace house built in Regency style. It has 5 floors and the photo shows the house from street view. There are black cast iron railings in front of the building and the building has a basement which you can just about see in the photo.
THE REGENCY TOWN HOUSE                                                          
13 Brunswick Square, Hove,  BN3 1EH

A really exciting and unique event:
A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A REGENCY TOWN HOUSE

Presented by lecturer and guide Sarah Tobias 
and Town House cook Paul Couchman

You will be welcomed with hot chocolate (or coffee) and plum cake in the kitchen followed by discussion on servant duties and then on to the basement of no. 10 Brunswick Square which is a time capsule, having been left undisturbed for many years, where you will enjoy a guided tour. Regency inspired lunch back at the Town House will be followed by an illustrated talk in the small servant hall on daily life for the wealthy who lived in the main part of the house - which we will then tour. Discussion, questions and answer session with afternoon tea and cake ends our pleasant day. 

£60 includes all talks, tours, hot drinks, lunch and cake.
Early Bird offer £47 Book via eventbrite  - there is a booking fee:

An Autumn Day in the Life of a Regency Town House 
£60 includes all talks, tours, hot drinks, lunch and cake.
Early Bird offer £47 Book via eventbrite  - there is a booking fee.

 Dates TBA. INFORMATION WILL BE POSTED HERE OR YOU CAN CONTACT ME FOR FURTHER INFORMATION.

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2022-2023 COURSES DETAILS COMING SOON -
Early enrolment essential to secure your place


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Sarah Tobias MA, BA Hons, Dip Eur Hum
(Former associate tutor at Sussex University)
Entertaining lecturer in social, cultural and local (Brighton, Sussex, UK) history.
Contact me for talks/guided walks/visits for groups, clubs, societies.
Current list of 30+ topics
Also contact me for poetry readings and narrations.
More information about me, my subjects, research and contact:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarah-tobias-0318943a?trk=nav_responsive_tab_profile 

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Courses -Venue Addresses, transport and refreshments
Brighton Metroplitan College MET (formerly City College)
Pelham Street, Brighton BN1 4FA
Location:
Behind York Place & London Road, turn up Cheapside – Aldi supermarket on corner. Or, turn left in Trafalgar St walking down from Station.
Transport & Parking:
Lots of buses nearby.
Nearby car park, about 5 minutes walk.
Railway station few minutes walk
Refreshments and further information:
College canteen. Tea and coffee bar on balcony of Main Building. Vending machine. 
Coffee shops, small cafés and public houses in nearby London Road 
London Road and Trafalgar Street: many shops, some banks and supermarkets

Whitehawk Inn Community Centre
Whitehawk Road Brighton, BN2 3NS
Transport & Parking:
Buses stop nearby and some outside venue
Metered street car parking
Refreshments:
Café and garden area
Further information:
Shops, Co-op, public library in same road.
Few minutes walk to sea, beach and Marina or East Brighton Park

Holy Cross Church Hall, Woodingdean
Warren Road, Brighton, BN2 6ND
Transport & Parking:
Car park outside Library and Community Centre over the road, opposite church hall. Bus nos 2, 22, 22A stop nearby.
Refreshments:
Tea-making facilities in hall. Small cafes nearby. Downs Hotel almost next door serves tea, coffee and refreshments at bar and has outside area. 
Further information:
Woodingdean public library over the road. Shops, Co-op, dry cleaners nearby    

Rottingdean Whiteway Centre
Whiteway Lane, Rottingdean, Brighton, BN2 7HB
Transport & Parking:
Very small car park outside, some nearby parking in side streets, car parks on main sea road (few mins walk).  Bus nos 2, 22, 22A stop nearby, Bus nos 12, 12A, 12X, 27C, 47 stop by the White Horse Hotel on the seafront - short walk.
Refreshments:
Tea-making facilities in hall. Small cafes nearby and in Museum tea garden next door during summer.
Further information:
Rottingdean public library and museum next door (opening times vary). Shops and Co-op in the High Street. Post office. Several historic public houses, village pond, windmill (not generally open), Grade II listed 1300s St Margaret's Church, accessible downland and a few minutes from the sea and beach. 
 
Preston Manor
Preston Drove, Brighton BN1 6SD
Location:
Situated end of Preston Park.
Transport & Parking:
Buses and rail nearby
Free parking outside and in adjacent street.
Refreshments:
No cafe. Refreshments provided by staff 
Delicatessen cafe and public houses opposite and in Preston Drove. Chalet restaurant in park.

The Regency Town House
13 Brunswick Square, Hove, BN3 1EH
Transport & Parking:
Buses stop at the top of Brunswick square in Western Road
Very limited parking. 
Refreshments:
Refreshments provided  
Lots of shops and cafes in Western Road. Seafront is about 2 minutes walk

The West Pier Centre
103-105 King's Road Arches, Brighton, BN1 2FN 
Transport & Parking:
Nearby car parks - Regency Square. Buses stop in Western Road and walk down.  
Refreshments:
Wine or cool drink provided  
Situated on the lower prom and seafront. Various shops and lots of cafes and restaurants. Hotels on upper level over the road. Western Road and popular streets of Brighton with many shops and cafes are 10-20 minutes walk

Sussex University
Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9RH
Location:
Campus located in the South Downs National Park
Transport & Parking:
Buses and rail nearby into town and elsewhere
Car parks
Refreshments:
Cafes and restaurants on campus.                                                                                                            
Co-op, pharmacy, books and stationery shops























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