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Outsider Visions: How the Marginalized Imagined Tomorrow

Outsider Visions: How the Marginalized Imagined Tomorrow

By: Atween Studios
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A history of science fiction podcast that centers the voices of those who used the genre to imagine liberation - from Mary Shelley's warning about unchecked power to Octavia Butler's visions of survival, revealing how outsiders have always used sci-fi to challenge the present by reimagining the future.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Atween Studios
Science Fiction World
Episodes
  • Fahrenheit 451's Burning Libraries: Bradbury's Anti-Censorship Manifesto
    Jun 16 2026
    Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451 (1953) in a UCLA library basement, on a rented typewriter, during the height of McCarthyism and the Hollywood blacklist. The novel imagines a future America where books are burned not by government decree but by popular demand — people chose television walls over literature, and the firemen simply serve the public will. The architecture of the novel is the architecture of conformity: the parlor walls that replace windows, the seashell radios that fill every ear, the suburban streets where no one walks. Bradbury was writing about the present: the House Un-American Activities Committee, the burning of 'subversive' books, the television culture that was replacing reading. This episode examines the novel's McCarthyite context, its prescient vision of media saturation, and its renewed relevance in the age of book bans, library defunding, and 'Don't Say Gay' legislation.

    SPOILERS! Please note that due to the nature of this podcast, each episode describes a novel in detail, including plot spoilers.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    20 mins
  • The Handmaid's Tale's Gilead: Atwood's Theocratic Architecture
    Jun 12 2026
    Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (1985) was written in West Berlin while the Wall still stood, at a time when Reagan-era religious conservatism was reshaping American politics. Atwood's rule: nothing in the novel that hasn't happened in history. The handmaid system draws on the Bible (Rachel and Leah), the Lebensborn program, Romanian forced reproduction policy, and the history of American slavery. The architecture of Gilead is the architecture of the female body made into state property: the Commander's house with its color-coded household, the Wall where executed bodies hang, Jezebel's brothel for elite men. This episode examines the novel's historical sourcing, its Reagan-era political context, and why it has become the defining image of reproductive rights activism — from the Dobbs decision protests to Project 2025.

    SPOILERS! Please note that due to the nature of this podcast, each episode describes a novel in detail, including plot spoilers.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    22 mins
  • The Monster's Mother: Frankenstein and Female Creation
    Jun 9 2026
    Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at 18, grieving the death of her infant, excluded from formal education, the daughter of feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and anarchist William Godwin. The novel is not a horror story — it is a political manifesto about what happens when men play God without accountability. The laboratory is a masculine space of creation that bypasses the female body; the creature is excluded from every domestic and social space; the scientist's hubris destroys everyone he loves. Written at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, Frankenstein asks who controls creation, who bears the consequences, and who gets to be human. This episode examines the radical political context of the novel's creation, the Villa Diodati summer of 1816, and why Shelley's warning has only grown more urgent in the age of AI and genetic engineering.

    SPOILERS! Please note that due to the nature of this podcast, each episode describes a novel in detail, including plot spoilers.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    21 mins
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