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Imaginary Worlds

Neurodivergent Futures

Imaginary Worlds

Eric Molinsky

Arts, Science Fiction, Fiction, Society & Culture

4.8 • 2.1K Ratings

🗓️ 14 April 2022

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One of the most common requests I've gotten over the years has been to do an episode about why so many autistic people are drawn towards science fiction, and these suggestions have come from listeners who are autistic or have autistic children. Fiction writer Ada Hoffmann, writer and professor Dora Raymaker, YouTube presenter Quinn Dexter, and author and professor Nick Walker, who co-runs the publishing company Autonomous Press, have each given this subject a lot of thought. Their experiences and perspectives as autistic sci-fi fans and creators overlapped in many ways, from the joy of complex worldbuilding, to identifying with fictional characters like Data or Spock, to wanting to imagine a future where aliens, humans and A.I. can coexist without a hierarchy of neurotypical perspectives. Featuring actress Shannon Tyo reading passages from Ada and Dora’s novels. Dora Raymaker’s new novel Resonance has just been published through Autonomous Press. Dora and Ada have also contributed short stories to Autonomous’ anthology series Spoon Knife. Quinn Dexter’s YouTube channel is Autistamtic. This episode is sponsored by Backblaze, Echoes of History: Ragnarök and Squarespace. Our ad partner is Multitude. If you’re interested in advertising on Imaginary Worlds, you can contact them here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Tab for a cause is a browser extension that lets you raise money for charity while doing

0:04.9

your thing online.

0:06.6

Whenever you open a new tab, you'll see a beautiful background photo and a small ad.

0:11.6

And part of that ad money goes towards a charity of your choice.

0:15.6

It's free and incredibly easy.

0:18.1

Transform your tabs into a force for good in just 30 seconds.

0:22.4

Sign up at tabforacaws.org slash imaginary worlds.

0:30.5

You're listening to imaginary worlds.

0:32.0

A show about how we create them and why we suspend or disbelief.

0:35.5

I'm Eric Mollinsky.

0:39.8

When I first began working on my podcast many years ago, a friend suggested that I do

0:44.6

an episode about why autistic people are drawn towards science fiction.

0:49.8

And she suggested this because her son is autistic and he was very into sci-fi.

0:54.6

At the time I couldn't find very much written about this, so I put the idea aside.

1:00.0

But over the years, more and more people have suggested this topic.

1:04.0

And many of the suggestions have come from listeners who are autistic.

1:08.5

So I began to wonder, is there something to this?

1:12.5

I interviewed four people for this episode.

1:15.1

They're each autistic.

1:16.6

They're each given the subject a lot of thought already, and they point me towards articles

1:21.2

and books about the connection between sci-fi fandom and autism.

1:26.0

They also had fairly similar answers as to why speculative fiction appealed to them personally.

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