ACTIVITY
The following images, videos and artworks are a series of creative responses to how walking interview and focus groups participants understood and experienced everyday sexisms. All accounts shown here are connected to different spaces on Australian university campuses. Returning to these locations or sites can be a daily reminder of experiences of everyday sexisms at work.
In this section:
Take your time exploring the content below. Hover the mouse over images to reveal the hidden experiences
Note where the pins are marking everyday sexisms in the university workplace
Watch the videos recounting lived experiences of everyday sexisms
HERE
The only place she could breastfeed that wasn't a toilet cubicle was her male line manager's office.
**These images are from creative interviews with Early Career Researchers, who photographed sites where they experienced sexisms in the workplace.
**These video’s feature quotes from creative focus group with university staff.
THERE
At a meeting with external contractors who were all male, one of them said, "Look at this big table, it’s like a stage - all we need is a stripper!”
AGAIN
Cornered by a student and asked to define her assessment feedback.
HERE
He doesn't experience sexisms in his office because he only works with men.
“She is cautious walking down this one hallway in her building because she had a confronting conversation with her line manager, who reprimanded her for taking time off work to care for her disabled child.”
ACTIVITY
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The creative responses below were generated by artist Dr Emma Fishwick as part of her PhD,
Slow Choreographies: addressing everyday sexisms through embodied creative methods.