Queering Reality Podcast

Queering Reality with Torrin Greathouse

31 min · 4 apr 2026
aflevering Queering Reality with Torrin Greathouse artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of Queering Reality, we’re joined by poet Torrin Greathouse [https://www.torringreathouse.com/] for a conversation that moves through the body, language, and the transformative power of queer imagination. Together, we explore how the body holds memory — and how queer identity reshapes what we inherit, remember, and reclaim. Drawing from the themes of Wound from the Mouth of a Wound, we consider the ways language can both harm and liberate, asking how it constructs, distorts, and reimagines queer realities. Our discussion traces poetry not only as a form of documentation, but as a space for transformation and possibility — where new ways of being can emerge. We also turn to the question of what it means to queer language itself, and how reworking religious imagery can become an act of resistance, survival, and re-enchantment. At its heart, this episode asks: if queerness is a way of seeing differently, how can poetry help us remake reality in its image? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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Alle afleveringen

46 afleveringen

aflevering Queering Reality with Dr. Seema Yasmin artwork

Queering Reality with Dr. Seema Yasmin

Dr. Seema Yasmin [https://seemayasmin.com/] is a physician, journalist, author, and one of the most incisive voices examining how information and misinformation shapes our understanding of the world. Her work asks urgent questions about who gets to define truth, whose expertise is trusted, and how systems of power influence what we believe. In her book What the Fact?, she explores the mechanics of misinformation and disinformation, revealing how false narratives spread not simply because people lack information, but because stories tap into identity, fear, belonging, and existing social inequalities. As a Muslim woman, physician, journalist, and advocate for health equity, she brings a deeply interdisciplinary lens to questions of power, representation, and resistance. Her work invites us to consider how misinformation functions not only as a public health threat, but also as a tool that can reinforce sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of systemic oppression. I talked with Dr. Yasmin about truth and authority, the politics of expertise, the targeting of marginalized communities through disinformation campaigns, the limits of Western frameworks for understanding justice and health, and what solidarity might look like in an increasingly polarized world. We’ll also explore whether hope is the right framework for this moment—or whether there are other ways of imagining collective action and transformation. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4 jun 202640 min
aflevering Queering Reality with Akil Kumarasamy artwork

Queering Reality with Akil Kumarasamy

In Akil Kumarasamy [https://akilk.com/home/]’s work, borders rarely stay still. They flicker, blur, and sometimes dissolve entirely—between countries and within them, across generations, between the living and the dead, the remembered and the imagined. Her stories move through these thresholds with a quiet intensity, asking what it means to inhabit more than one place, more than one self, at once. Liminality, in her hands, is not just a state of in-betweenness but a charged space where identity is continually made and unmade. In this conversation, we’ll explore how her writing navigates these shifting terrains—how migration reshapes time, how history lingers in intimate ways, and how her characters negotiate belonging across fractured geographies. We’ll also turn to the intersections of queerness and feminism in her work: how desire, power, and resistance emerge within constrained worlds, and how her stories open up new possibilities for imagining selfhood beyond fixed categories. Together, these themes invite a deeper look at the porous edges of identity and the creative potential that exists in crossing—and recrossing—them. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

30 apr 202623 min
aflevering Queering Reality with Melissa Lozada-Oliva artwork

Queering Reality with Melissa Lozada-Oliva

Melissa Lozada-Oliva [https://www.melissalozadaoliva.com/about] is a writer whose work moves fluidly between memory, myth, and pop culture, creating narratives that are as emotionally sharp as they are surreal. Known for her background in performance poetry and her genre-bending storytelling, Lozada-Oliva invites us into a conversation about identity, desire, and the stories we inherit and disrupt. In this podcast episode, we explore how she navigates the space between realism and dream logic, what it means to rewrite cultural archetypes as a Latina writer, and how performance has shaped her understanding of voice and truth. We also dive into her nuanced approach to the body, fragmented identity, and queerness as a creative practice. At its core, this conversation asks what it means to write toward complexity — even when it’s messy, uncomfortable, or refuses easy definition. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

17 apr 202632 min
aflevering Queering Reality with Torrin Greathouse artwork

Queering Reality with Torrin Greathouse

In this episode of Queering Reality, we’re joined by poet Torrin Greathouse [https://www.torringreathouse.com/] for a conversation that moves through the body, language, and the transformative power of queer imagination. Together, we explore how the body holds memory — and how queer identity reshapes what we inherit, remember, and reclaim. Drawing from the themes of Wound from the Mouth of a Wound, we consider the ways language can both harm and liberate, asking how it constructs, distorts, and reimagines queer realities. Our discussion traces poetry not only as a form of documentation, but as a space for transformation and possibility — where new ways of being can emerge. We also turn to the question of what it means to queer language itself, and how reworking religious imagery can become an act of resistance, survival, and re-enchantment. At its heart, this episode asks: if queerness is a way of seeing differently, how can poetry help us remake reality in its image? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4 apr 202631 min
aflevering Queering Reality With Sarah Barmak artwork

Queering Reality With Sarah Barmak

Today’s episode sits right at the edge of something both deeply personal and profoundly political: female desire. Not the version we’ve inherited filtered through patriarchy, shame, and silence, but the messy, expansive, often contradictory realities of what it actually means to want. Because for so many women and queer people, desire isn’t just about attraction. It’s shaped by power, by culture, by trauma, by the quiet and loud ways we’ve been taught to disconnect from our bodies or perform them for someone else. So what does it mean to come back to ourselves? To reclaim desire not as something we owe, but something we author? I’m joined today by Sarah Barmak [https://thewalrus.ca/author/sarah-barmak/], a journalist and author who has spent years exploring the science, psychology, and lived experience of female sexuality. Together, we’re queering the idea that desire is fixed, linear, or even fully knowable. We talk about the myths we’ve internalized, the realities we rarely name, and the radical potential of redefining pleasure on our own terms. This conversation is about curiosity over certainty, embodiment over performance, and the courage it takes to ask: what do I actually want when no one else is watching? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.queeringreality.com [https://www.queeringreality.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20 mrt 202630 min