Peep This Noise is a podcast centered on critical analysis of media of all kinds. We’ll be aiming for an open minded, approachable discussion of a variety of topics in literature, film, music, theatre, games, and other forms of art. As we cover various pieces, we examine things like:
Representation of ethnicity, belief, and gender in media;
Framing and representation of disability in art;
How writers explore and portray physical and emotional trauma;
How various genres, including science fiction and fantasy, provide metaphors for and potential solutions to modern society’s most troubling problems, such as violence, hate, and socioeconomic/environmental crises;
Perspectives for critical analysis, including (but not limited to) feminist, queer studies, and Marxist reads of media.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Peep This Noise is a podcast centered on critical analysis of media of all kinds. We’ll be aiming for an open minded, approachable discussion of a variety of topics in literature, film, music, theatre, games, and other forms of art. As we cover various pieces, we examine things like:
Representation of ethnicity, belief, and gender in media;
Framing and representation of disability in art;
How writers explore and portray physical and emotional trauma;
How various genres, including science fiction and fantasy, provide metaphors for and potential solutions to modern society’s most troubling problems, such as violence, hate, and socioeconomic/environmental crises;
Perspectives for critical analysis, including (but not limited to) feminist, queer studies, and Marxist reads of media.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Hello, sweet summer children! Due to some unexpected difficulties, we're releasing this old episode from our archive!
In it, we talk about The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, which is something of a common text in literary studies... Not that I had any idea of that at the time we recorded this episode, all the way back in November 2019.
If you want to read it before listening, you should be able to find it on the internet for free.
Also, stay around for the whole thing to hear Gregg do an impassioned reading of the story's final moments.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.