17/03/2019
Former Imam Yahya Barry shares his life story, a fresh look at schadenfreude, German for βshame-joyβ, the age of anxiety and a pilgrimage with a difference.
Former Imam of Edinburgh Central Mosque, Yahya Barry, an expert in Muslim responses to right wing populism shares his life story which has taken him from the Gambia to England, Saudi Arabia, Sweden and now Scotland.
The Japanese have a saying: βThe misfortune of others tastes like honey.β Tiffany Watt Smithβs latest book takes a fresh look at schadenfreude, German for βshame-joyβ, that deliciously guilty pleasure we feel at anotherβs failure.
Whether itβs living with personal or political uncertainty itβs been said that we are currently living through an Age of Anxiety. With a surge in the sale of self-help books Kara Brown and Tanya Goburdhun share their thoughts on whether people are finding reassurance inside their pages or if our worries are being exploited.
Far from easy on the eye, some people still canβt bear to look at them. 200 years on we revisit Goyaβs disturbing and dramatic Black Paintings with Dr Claudia Hopkins, Senior Lecturer in Art History at the University of Edinburgh and Professor Andrew Ginger, Head of the School of Languages, Culture, Art History and Music at the University of Birmingham.
A pilgrimage with a difference β not walking, but running in the footsteps of the Celtic saints with ultra-runner, Mark Calder.
Last on
Clip
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Why do we take pleasure in celebritiesβ misfortunes?
Duration: 00:47
Richard Holloway with Tanya Goburdhun and Kara Brown
Former Imam of Edinburgh Central Mosque, Yahya Barry
Mark Calder - A pilgrimage with a difference
Broadcast
- Sun 17 Mar 2019 10:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Scotland