Joe Moran

  • Read by: Fred Parker

    Duration: 14 hrs 30 mins

    Since its beginnings during WW2, television has assumed a central role in our houses and our lives. Television has created controversy, brought coronations and World Cups into living rooms, allowed us access to 24hr news and media and as shows come and go in popularity, the history of television shows us how our society has changed.

    Arts General
  • Read by: Ned Porteous

    Duration: 5 hrs 28 mins

    Do you ever feel like a failure? Enter widely acclaimed observer of daily life Professor Joe Moran, not to tell you that everything will be all right in the end, but to reassure you that failure is an occupational hazard of being human. It's the small print in life's terms and conditions. Covering everything from examination dreams to fourth-placed Olympians, If You Should Fail is about how modern life, in a world of self-advertised success, makes us feel like failures, frauds and imposters. We need more narratives of failure, and to see that not every failure can be made into a success - and that's OK.

    As Moran shows, even the supremely gifted Leonardo da Vinci could be seen as a failure. Most artists, writers, sports stars and business people face failure. We all will, and can learn how to live with it. To echo Virginia Woolf, beauty "is only got by the failure to get it . . . by facing what must be humiliation - the things one can't do." Combining philosophy, psychology, history and literature, Moran's ultimately upbeat reflections on being human, and his critique of how we live now, offers comfort, hope - and solace.

    Psychology & Sociology
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