Ava Wong Davies' piece is built off a series of conversations had with British East and South East Asian women in the wake of a recent uptick in anti-Asian violence.
Ojen wakes up to find the women of her family taking over her kitchen. The noise, smells, tastes and sounds fill up her small flat with memories: of her past, of her heritage, and of distant horrors that bubble just underneath the surface.
An exploration of internalised misogyny within queer femme bodies and the womxn they romantically love, inspired by conversations with Queer Black women and non-binary people.
One narrator voices the experiences of multiple women, each in a relationship with a man of a different ethnicity to her own, as they navigate the intersections of race and gender.
Belly of the Wolf is a disorientating fairytale of one woman's journey to recover who she is, and a celebration of their strength, resilience and power.
In this bonus episode, Futures Theatre invited 5 long term participants of its creative engagement programme, all of whom are neurodivergent, to speak about their experiences and share their creative writing.