Following on from our recent publication, we’ve now released the companion podcast episode for the paper.
“Voices at the Margins: Podcasting as Neuroqueer Collaborative Autoethnography and Epistemic Healing” was co-created through dialogue, through relationship, through conversation that unfolded over time — alongside Chris Wells, Emma Nicholson, bee mayhew, Marnina Kammersell, Sheldon and Teena Mogler, whose voices and thinking shaped this work in meaningful ways.
And this podcast episode brings that process back into the foreground.
Because while the paper captures the ideas, the episode captures something else:
The feel of the research.
The movement of meaning-making.
The moments that don’t always translate neatly onto the page.
In this conversation, we reflect on:
• Podcasting as a method of inquiry, not just dissemination
• The relational and sometimes messy process of co-creating knowledge
• And what we mean by epistemic healing: where research becomes a site of repair, not just analysis
This work sits within a broader critical turn in neurodiversity studies, one that calls for more participatory, interdisciplinary, and non-pathologising approaches to knowledge production.
For me, this episode is a reminder that research doesn’t end at publication.
Sometimes, it continues in voice.
In dialogue.
In the spaces where knowledge is still unfolding.
If you’ve read the paper, this adds another layer.
If you haven’t, this is a beautiful entry point.
Would love to hear what resonates for you!