stuttering commons

Disorderly Voices

Society EN ↓ 7 Folgen

Disorderly voices is a space to reflect, review and discuss pieces of dysfluent writing, scholarship and art that transform our understandings of stammering.

Autor

stuttering commons

Kategorie

Society

Neueste Folge

3. Aug 2025

Wo hören?

Podcasts in der App Replaio Radio Bald verfügbar

Podcasts kommen bald in die App. Installiere sie jetzt und erlebe als Erster einen ganz neuen Blick auf Podcasts

Bei Google Play herunterladen Kostenlos installieren Android 5 Mio.+ Downloads · Bewertung 4,8 iOS bald

Folgen

7. Stammering Pride and Prejudice with Patrick Campbell 03.08.2025

Patrick and Maria swap places for this episode, as Maria interviews Patrick about Stammering Pride and Prejudice and his other stammering work. Patrick talks about the tensions in writing about stammering pride, the power of artistic collaborations and how the stammering community has changed and developed over the past decade. Links: Stammering Pride and Prejudice: Difference not Defect by Patric...

6. Dysfluent Literature with Maria Stuart 09.06.2025

Host Patrick Campbell is joined by Sam Simpson and Dr. Maria Stuart to discuss Maria’s work on the Stammering Collective and her readings of dysfluency in poetry. Maria talks about her experiences in university as a person who stutters – both as a student and an educator, her work on dysfluency in Emily Dickinson’s poetic voice, (dys)fluency in popular culture, and building a stuttering heritage....

5. Looking back, looking forward with Sam Simpson 11.05.2025

Show Notes Hosts Patrick Campbell and Maria Stewart are joined by Conor Foran and Sam Simpson to discuss Sam’s article Looking Back, Looking Forward from the book Stammering Pride and Prejudice: Difference not Defect. Sam’s article speaks to the frustration but also the hope of change in how stuttering is considered within the speech therapy profession. Together, they discuss topics like the power...

4. Dysfluent with Conor Foran 12.04.2025

How should stuttering look in text? Can representations of stuttering in written form reflect its spontaneity and variety? Host Patrick Campbell is joined by Chris Constantino and artist Conor Foran to discuss how Conor’s final project in art school led him to a decade-long project in creating a typeface, Dysfluent Mono, that represents stuttering. Conor explains how the font tries to escape stere...

3. Stuttering Gain with Christopher Constantino 10.03.2025

What does it mean to be proud of one’s stutter? What does one gain from their stutter? Hosts Patrick, Maria, and Josh are joined by Chris Constantino to discuss his radical essay Stuttering Gain and dive into the world of stuttering pride. In this episode, they talk about the unique experience of stuttering and how we can find benefit in stuttering, as opposed to only thinking about stuttering as...

1. Welcome, welcome, welcome 10.02.2025

Welcome, welcome, welcome. Disorderly voices is a new stammering podcast. A space to reflect, review and discuss pieces of dysfluent writing, scholarship and art that transform our understandings of stammering. Hosts Patrick Campbell and Maria Stuart, along with their first guest Joshua St. Pierre, introduce themselves, their broader research interests, and the role of stammering and dysfluency in...

2. Construction of the Disabled Speaker with Joshua St Pierre 10.02.2025

On this first full episode of Disorderly Voices, hosts Patrick Campbell and Maria Stuart are joined by Josh St. Pierre to discuss his article “The Construction of the Disabled Speaker: Locating Stuttering in Disability Studies.” In this work Josh traces the origins of speech norms and how they are embedded within economic and social structures. Josh, Patrick, and Maria discuss his work within the...

Höre den Podcast Disorderly Voices in Replaio

Radio und Podcasts in einer App - kostenlos und ohne Anmeldung. Installiere sie noch heute und verpasse den Start nicht

Bei Google Play herunterladen

Replaio ist kein Herausgeber von Podcasts; die Namen der Sendungen, Cover und Audioinhalte gehören ihren Autoren und werden über öffentliche RSS-Feeds verbreitet