Page de couverture de How It Feels to Be Alive

How It Feels to Be Alive

Encounters with Art and Our Selves

Précommander avec l'essai gratuit
Choisissez 1 livre audio par mois dans notre incomparable catalogue.
Accès illimité à notre catalogue d'écoute à volonté de plus de 15 000 livres audio et balados
L'abonnement Premium Plus se renouvelle automatiquement au tarif de 14,95 $/mois + taxes applicables après 30 jours. Annulation possible à tout moment.

How It Feels to Be Alive

Auteur(s): Megan O'Grady
Narrateur(s): Megan O'Grady
Précommander avec l'essai gratuit

14,95$ par mois après 30 jours. Annulable en tout temps.

Précommander pour 20,82 $

Précommander pour 20,82 $

À propos de cet audio

Barbara Kruger once defined art as "the ability to show and tell, through a kind of eloquent shorthand, how it feels to be alive." Testing that claim, How It Feels to Be Alive braids criticism with personal narrative to consider art's intimate effects and how it might help us find clarity in an uncertain world.

When Megan O'Grady was a teenager, she saw a photograph in a museum that changed her life. At the end of an early marriage, art stoked new ways of thinking about connection and transformation. As a new parent, it guided her to confront vulnerability and shame. Whether seeking a home or contending with crises personal, political, and ecological, art was a critical lifeline, a source of beauty, solace, and provocation.

Looking closely at five artworks and the context in which each was made, O'Grady examines the work's impact, implicating sometimes unexpected lineages and genres. How does art expand and redirect our imaginations and attention? When bottom-line or nihilistic thinking dominates our public sphere, what meanings and alternatives does it offer? A vital call to engage deeply, to see in new ways, and to rethink all that we take for granted, How It Feels to Be Alive inspires and exhorts, providing a template to think through the knottiest problems in our culture, our selves, and the connections between the two.

©2026 Megan O'Grady (P)2026 Tantor Media
Art Histoire et critique de l'art
Pas encore de commentaire