Disorderly Voices Podcast Por stuttering commons arte de portada

Disorderly Voices

Disorderly Voices

De: stuttering commons
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Disorderly voices is a space to reflect, review and discuss pieces of dysfluent writing, scholarship and art that transform our understandings of stammering.Copyright 2025 All rights reserved. Arte Ciencia Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • 6. Dysfluent Literature with Maria Stuart
    Jun 9 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.

    Links

    • The Stammering Collective
    • Stuttering Gain by Christopher Constantino
    • Stammering Pride and Prejudice edited by Patrick Campbell, Christopher Constantino, Sam Simpson (2019)
    • Entangling the Medical Humanities, by Des Fitzgerald and Felicity Callard, in The Edinburgh Companion to the Critical Medical Humanities (2016)
    • Fr 923 by Emily Dickinson (1865)
    • Dysfluencies: On Speech Disorders in Modern Literature by Chris Eagle (2013)
    • The Clearing - JJJJJerome Ellis
    • Aster of Ceremonies - JJJJJerome Ellis (2023)
    • Honest Speech by Erin Shick
      • Two access options: Youtube (no text version but video has captions, better audio); Voicemail Poems (with text, lower audio quality)
    • Blert by Jordan Scott (2008)
    • I Talk Like a River by Jordan Scott (2020)
    • Black Swan Green by David Mitchell (2007)
    • Paul Aston, Painter
    • Conor Foran
    • Dysfluency in Three Modes of Belonging by Josh St. Pierre (2024)
    • Stuttering Commons

    Sam Simpson is a UK-based speech and language pathologist who is interested in stammering activism.

    Dr. Maria Stuart teaches at University College Dublin in the School of English, Drama, and Film. Her areas of focus are American literature, crime fiction, and dysfluency studies.

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    1 h y 4 m
  • 5. Looking back, looking forward with Sam Simpson
    May 11 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 of the social model of disability, how people who stammer can make choices when it comes to different therapies, and how narratives around advancements in neuroscience may be damaging to stuttering and other disability movements.

    Links

    • Stammering Pride and Prejudice edited by Patrick Campbell, Christopher Constantino, Sam Simpson (2019)
    • “Stammering activism and speech-language therapy: An inside view” by Sam Simpson (2016)
    • “A social model of stammering” by Sam Simpson and Carolyn Cheasman (2000)
    • Did I Stutter?
    • Mustn’t Grumble: Writing by Disabled Women by Lois Keith (1994)
    • Stuttering Commons
    • The disabling nature of hope in discovering a biological explanation of stuttering by Prabhat, Ellen Rombouts and Pascal Borry (2022)
    • The Stammering Collective
    • “Stuttering and the social model” by Christopher Constantino, Patrick Campbell, and Sam Simpson (2022)
    • Action for Stammering Children
    • Beyond Aphasia: Therapies For Living With Communication Disability, by Carole Pound, Susie Parr, Jayne Lindsay, Celia Woolf (2000)

    Sam Simpson is a Southwest London-based speech and language therapist, person-centered counsellor, supervisor, trainer, and stammering ally.

    Conor Foran is a London-based Irish artist and designer who stutters.

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    1 h y 2 m
  • 4. Dysfluent with Conor Foran
    Apr 12 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 stereotypical references of stuttering and his journey to publishing the magazine Dysfluent, which uses the font.

    Links

    • Conor Foran
    • Dysfluent magazine
      • ‘Making Waves’ stuttering pride flag - Dysfluent magazine
      • Stuttering Can Create Time billboard by People Who Stutter Create collective
      • Stuttering Foundation of America
      • Portraits of people stammering - Paul Aston
      • JJJJJerome Ellis
    • Willemijn Bolks
    • Stutterology - Ezra Horak
    • The Clearing - JJJJJerome Ellis

    Chris Constantino is a stutterer and speech language pathologist at Florida State University who teaches stuttering and counselling to graduate students, and supervises therapy. Chris researches how we can make the experience of stuttering better.

    Conor Foran is a London-based Irish artist who stutters. He is the founder of Dysfluent magazine, was a collaborator on the ‘making waves’ stuttering pride flag, and most recently collaborated with the People Who Stutter Create collective to create the Stuttering Can Create Time billboard.

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    59 m
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