Nina Funnell
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's one type.
But there's all kinds of change that people are already doing within their own communities, changing attitudes within their own families, changing attitudes within their schools, doing education, doing community-based work.
A whole lot of social work is about change.
There's all different types of reform.
This is just my little piece of the puzzle, I guess.
It's a pretty big piece of the puzzle.
I think it's more that the survivors that I have profiled have, like when I was doing the Let Her Speak campaign, there was this great moment where I was working with one of the survivors in Tasmania.
So her name's Janelle O'Connor.
And at the time we had not got her court order yet.
And so we couldn't identify her real name and face yet.
And
So she had chosen pseudonym for herself and we had to take a photograph where she wasn't, her face wasn't visible.
The photographer had the brief, went out, took a photo of her and it was her head in her hands, sort of crouched down, very fetal position.
It almost looked like she was crying in her hands.
It was so disempowering.
It was the typical kind of old school way in which victim survivor stories are presented, you know, very sort of, you know,
fetal position, almost like, you know, rocking in the corner, often in shadowy sort of... I looked at it.
I hated it.
I showed it to Janelle.
She hated it as well.