Crossings: The EWF Podcast

Season 3, Episode 2: Body Language

11.15.2021 - By Emerging Writers' FestivalPlay

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In this episode, Oliver Reeson, Mia Nie and Tori Hobbs share readings on the theme Body Language.

These artists reflect on bodies in pain and bodies in pleasure; what it means to inhabit a body in transition and a body in illness. They will consider both the ordinariness and specialness, as well as the resistance, of living in their bodies.

Oliver Reeson is an essayist and screenwriter. In 2021, they are one of the recipients of The Next Chapter Fellowship, mentored by Maria Tumarkin. They are also the co-creator and writer of SBS web series Homecoming Queens.

You can read Oliver Reeson's essay ‘Body Language: on Kylie Minogue, Cancer and Coming Back to Life’ here: https://lithub.com/body-language-on-kylie-minogue-cancer-and-coming-back-to-life/

Mia Nie is a Chinese-Australian comic artist, zine-maker, and award-nominated ex-poet. Her work explores the complexities, contradictions, and deeply felt desires of transgender subjectivity. She is passionate about understanding queer history and imagining queer futures. Mia is a recipient of The Wheeler Centre’s The Next Chapter 2020 Fellowship, and is currently working on her first graphic novel.

Tori Hobbs is a queer, non-binary, disabled, low-income, Burgher writer and care worker living on Ngunnawal, Ngunawal and Ngambri land. Tori hopes to invest their personal and professional experiences of ableism, care work, disability justice and its intersections into all that they do.

Vignettes is produced by Millie Baylis and audio produced by Joe Buchan. Our theme music was created by Thu Care and the artwork is by Molly Hunt. You can find out more about the team behind this podcast and the artists featured, as well as access a transcript of the episode, on the EWF website – at emergingwritersfestival.org.au

This podcast was produced on the lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nations. We acknowledge that First Nations Peoples are the first storytellers of this land, and that their sovereignty has never been ceded. We pay respects to Elders past and present, and to the Elders of the lands that this podcast reaches.

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