Episode Details
Back to EpisodesThe Literary Anatomy of New Year's Resolutions
Description
Every New Year arrives heavy with meaning, inviting resolutions that hover between hope and self-deception. From Samuel Pepys’s anxious self-accounting to gangsters in The Godfather vowing moral restraint, writers and filmmakers have long used the turning of the calendar as a moment of reckoning—about sobriety, love, virtue, and the fear of time slipping away. In this episode, we explore why this arbitrary date carries such emotional weight, how its promises are so often broken, and why failure has become part of the ritual itself. The story suggests that New Year’s resolutions endure not because they work, but because they give shape to a deeply human desire: to pause, take stock, and imagine—however briefly—that we might still become someone better.
https://www.economist.com/culture/2023/12/30/a-cultural-guide-to-new-years-resolutions