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VERSE MAGAZINE Edition 31 2019
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A free wellbeing event for all students.
11 am - 2 pm City West // Tue 8 Oct City East // Wed 9 Oct Mawson Lakes // Tue 15 Oct Magill // Wed 16 Oct Whyalla // Wed 9 Oct 10 am - 3 pm Mt Gambier // Wed 9 Oct
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Edition 31 2019
USASA.sa.edu.au/UniTopia
CONTENTS Edition 31 | October - November 2019
04 Imagine: Christina Massolino 10 Fig Leaves 12 The Quest to Cum 16 Crimson love 17 A woman’s mark 18 Playlist: Songs to celebrate Aboriginal artists 20 Cafeteria 21 What it all comes down to 23 Interview: Shalina Furtado 28 Humans of UniSA: Edition 31 32 Home 38 Neon Nights in Hong Kong 42 Why India gives me hope for the world 48 Match Studio: Let’s talk about the taboo 52 Let’s talk politics 56 Review: Existential Threats 58 The Signs as Game Changers 60 USASA Club Feature: AYCC 62 USASA Calendar 63 USASA President’s Letter
Above Image Enrico Becker Cover Image Lily Roberts We respectfully acknowledge the Kaurna, Boandik and Barngarla First Nations Peoples and their Elders past, present, and emerging, who are the First Nations’ traditional owners of the land that are now home to the University of South Australia’s campuses in Adelaide, Mount Gambier and Whyalla.
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EDITOR'S LETTER Edition 31 Head Editor | Annabel Bowles
Recently, a woman I had just met told me something that’s stuck with me ever since: ‘There shouldn’t be anything that you can’t have a conversation about. You can be respectful, you can be mindful, you can be tactful, and you should be allowed to talk about anything. You should also be given an answer that’s truthful. It may not have all the knowledge, but you should be given an answer.’ With that idea in mind, we called out for submissions on any topic that you think needs to be talked about more, or in a different way. More than anything, our contributors spoke about abuse, assault, and objectification of women. Some of these pieces aren’t easy to read. They can be ugly and uncomfortable conversations, but they’re so important to have. I’ll let this edition tell you why. Then these pages will take you from Hong Kong to Delhi; two places where humanity seems to be at the core of both chaos and community. Between the words you’ll also find some of this year’s best artist features; from glassmakers to illustrators, and embroiderers to photographers. It’s been an immense joy to put together Verse this year. On behalf of Tanner, Oliver, Geena, Ryan and myself, I would also like to say thank you; to our storytellers, artists, and to you, our readers. Verse Magazine has always been for, and about, you. We hope you’ve soaked up just as much from these pages as we have.
Head Editor A nnabel Bowles | Co-Head Editor Tanner Muller | Co-Head Editor Ryan Colsey Communications & Digital Editor Geena Ho | Graphic Designer Oliver White | Printer Newst yle Print Design & Production Consultant Jack son Polley | Design & Production Consultant Rachael Sharman The views expressed in this magazine are not necessarily representative of the views of USASA or the editors.
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WANTED Head Editor Comms & Digital Editor Graphic Designer for the 2020 Verse Magazine Editorial Team
If you no, you know.
Verse is recruiting driven, organised, innovative & charismatic students to be apart of the 2020 team! This is an opportunity to gain experience creating printed publications from start to finish, collect a wide variety of content, put your problem solving skills to the test and make some awesome connections. This role is high pressure but high reward! Verse is recruiting Head Editor, Comms & Digital Editor and a Graphic Designer. Applications close 4 November 2019. Find out more and how to apply below.
Apply now USASA.sa.edu.au/VerseRecruit Edition 31 2019
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Christina Massolino
Imagine: Christina Massolino Interview by Oliver White Artwork by Christina Massolino
Oliver White, our graphic designer turned interviewer, sat down with third-year contemporary art student
Could you tell us a little bit about yourself and what you’re studying? I’m currently in my third year of a Bachelor of Contemporary Art. I’m also a part of the
Christina Massolino for this
Emerging Curators Program, which is a City
edition’s Imagine. Alongside
of Adelaide initiative supported by Carclew*.
curating for the City of Adelaide council, she creates emotive mixed-method portraits in her disorderly home studio. Her final year has seen her explore sexual
That’s for this whole year and I‘m doing it with two other people as well, Chiranjika Grasby and Jack McBride. So at the moment I’m practicing in art and also doing a bit of curating. What inspires the subject matter behind your paintings?
assault and its resulting
Mostly women, and the personal struggle with
impact on female and
identity as a woman – as well as people, faces
female-identifying victims.
and feelings. Is there a particular direction you’re focused in for your third year? Yes, the final year of a Bachelor of Contemporary Art is essentially a year-long project. This year I’ve been exploring ideals of purity and impurity within women and people who identify as women. It started that way, but as the year went on I’ve focused more towards sexual assault and how those who have experienced sexual assault can feel purity and impurity. It’s a very strongly held belief in Western societies and other societies that women have to be pure, such as the concept of virginity, and I find it really interesting
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Imagine
(especially in my own experience) when that
What age did you begin drawing? Did you begin
choice is taken away from you. Say if you were
with drawing?
abused as a child or as a teenager, how then growing up as an adult you might feel impure
Yes, I’d say so, more so in high school. In Years 7
because you weren’t given that choice, and
and 8 I began drawing more. I definitely feel as
because people have wronged you. But, you’re
though my creative process really stems from
also supposed to feel pure because you didn’t
my childhood. We had a ‘useful cupboard’ where
make that decision yourself.
Mum would place recycled objects and items
I’ve also been talking to some other people
we weren’t going to throw away, and she would
who have experienced sexual assault; getting
say ‘If you’re bored, do something in the useful
their stories and seeing what this grey area is
cupboard, make something!’ I feel as if that was
that we don’t really talk about much. They often
more important to me than techniques I learnt
reflect on how horrible they feel after being
from drawing and lessons in high school.
assaulted, but we don’t talk about how a lot of that has to do with feeling dirty or unclean. My third year started very broad, but it’s
Do you think your decision to study an art degree was inevitable?
now heading in the direction of exploring those themes in my painting. I do portrait painting,
No, I had originally chosen to do journalism,
however, I also combine traditional painting
thinking that was what I wanted to do, but I
methods with textile work and thread.
started and didn’t like it. So, art wasn’t always
Having previously undertaken an exploration of
what I wanted to study.
different methods in past years, I have all that experience behind me too.
How has your experience with Carclew been this year?
What are your initial thought processes when you’re starting a new work?
Working with Carlew this year doing curating has been really good, as it’s something I’ve
Usually when I start a new work it’s come after
never done before. I had a curating subject last
a lot of thought and consideration. I will have
year as part of my degree, which inspired me
an idea in my head – a feeling, an emotion, that
to pursue this route. They’ve enabled me to do
I’ve been feeling for a couple of weeks, such as
so many things – curating two exhibitions,
guilt or disgust – and then I will start creating
working with two other people, and finding a
that. It happens very rapidly after a long time
clearer career direction – that I wouldn’t have
of consideration.
done otherwise.
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Christina Massolino
Christina Massolino
How would you describe the perfect working studio space? I’m a very messy person, so it’s hard when I work in my studio on Level 7 because I have to keep it clean due to it being a shared space. But my studio at home is very messy and I kind of like to work that way. A bit disorganised, but a bit of order to it. I’d love a big warehouse where I could just make massive works. I also definitely prefer to work alone. I wouldn’t be opposed to sharing but prefer to be alone. What future endeavours are you hoping for in the coming years? Next year, I’m hoping to get into some more curating work, and I want to work on my own artwork and see where that takes me. After that, I would like to pursue an Honours in Art and Design through UniSA. ◼ *Carclew is South Australia’s only multi-art form and cultural organisation dedicated to people under the age of 27. It supports emerging artists with workshops, events, arts projects, funding programs, and skill development opportunities.
Fig Leaves Ella-Maude Wilson
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Photography
These pieces are inspired by the sculptural work in the Accademia Gallery (home of Michelangelo’s David) in Florence, Italy. When I entered the gallery, the first work I saw was Jean de Boulogne’s Rape of the Sabines, which depicts the struggles of a woman being assaulted by a man. As I walked through the Accademia, I found that the only representations of women were focused on their sexuality or gender. While we all marvelled at the perfection of David in the heart of the Gallery, it struck me how imbalanced the representations of women were to men in these classical sculptures, and how little has really changed today. In an age of mass accessibility to data, explicit material is instantaneously accessible through our fingertips; yet what does this mean for artistic expression and visualisations of the nude form in the online realm? As the variety of pictorial representations of the nude changes, at what point does photography stop being art and start becoming self-documentation? Is there a place for photographic nudity in contemporary society that isn’t within the pornographic or sexting scope? Or will our dutiful modesty simply adorn fig leaves to genitalia in the hopes of attaining perceivably innocuous art?
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Reflection
The Quest to Cum Words by Jemah Finn Illustrations by Lucinda Penn
I
*Warning: this is a true story containing explicit language on sexual assault and rape.
want you to come a journey with me. Nope, I’m
I’ve tried different people. I’ve tried different
not trying to ‘find myself’. Nor am I heading
locations. I’ve also tried myself. But nope, no
on the trip of a lifetime. I am on a quest.
toe-curling, body-convulsing, scream-inducing
A quest to cum.
pleasure. I’ve even had a man stop mid-thrust and belt out the drum solo to Phil Collins’
That’s right, I’m sharing my journey to orgasm
In the Air Tonight on my thighs before
with the world. Why? Because this journey is
continuing to penetrate me to the beat … but
so much more than a desire to feel good in the
still, astoundingly, no orgasm.
bedroom. I’m reclaiming the power that was taken from me when I was sexually assaulted
Throughout all these trials and tribulations,
four years ago.
I started to think it was me. I must have been
doing something wrong. Still not acknowledging I was just shy of 19 when a ‘friend’ tore away my
my assault and the impact it had on me,
innocence. In an act I repeatedly said ‘no’ to,
I listened to misguided voices telling me it
he penetrated me with his penis and said 'It’s
wasn’t normal to dislike sex. I assumed I was
already in. You may as well let me finish.’
asexual or gay or that my vagina was simply
His dick did not give me the pleasure he thought
broken. The pressure and desire to orgasm
it would, but I don’t think that bothered him
only made me drier than the Sahara Desert and
anyway. That night, his force and his words took
pushed the all-glorious orgasm even further out
many things from me; confidence, trust, and
of reach.
the ability to find pleasure in sex. I was left with only a brave face to mask the crippling shame
I’m fed up. I just want to feel what you see in the
and confusion.
movies; that moment of relinquishing pleasure, where the girl throws her head back and bites
For those reasons, I didn’t acknowledge my
her lip in utter indulgence.
assault until this year, four years after it happened. A lack of visibility on these issues
Now, I’m on a mission to make it happen.
lead me to suppress the damage it caused. I always believed it wasn’t assault if I agreed to
The journey began, as all journeys do, with
leave the party with him. It couldn’t have been
searching the depths of the internet. I googled
rape if my vagina tingled with satisfaction. I may
the shit out of broken vaginas. I watched how-
have said no with my mouth, but my wet pussy
to videos on orgasms, and my browser history
was screaming yes.
resembled that of a teenage boy who had just discovered porn.
The circumstances of the first and last time I was close to orgasming are the primary reason
Eventually, I found a Ted Talk that linked
why, at 23-years-old, I have barely felt any
shame to pleasure, explaining how it can be
genital arousal since. And yes, my assault was
hard to feel good if your brain feels any sense
the closest I have ever been to an orgasm.
of embarrassment. A few more articles soon
Weird, right? Don’t worry, I’ve heard it all
surfaced, and sure enough, they filled the
before. It’s not rape if you like it.
missing gaps. One told of how the body must be
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relaxed to orgasm, which it cannot do if your subconscious is preoccupied. Another article explained that an orgasm is a learned response, like a dog sitting for a treat. Then I found a video discussing the shame women often feel after being assaulted, and their struggle to admit they’d been through a traumatic experience. This puzzle was putting itself together before my eyes, and after some time, it all made sense. I eventually admitted to myself that I had been assaulted. Because I felt some pleasure at the
The first time was when I was just 13 and I was pressured into many sexual acts by someone. Then they got angry at me when I stopped them from having sex with me, just as they were about to
time, I’d always neglected to recognise it was assault. But it wasn’t my fault. I didn’t want any of it. I now continue to remind myself of the research: genital arousal is a learned response, and never a form of consent. I was also left wondering how the sticky link between shame and pleasure wasn’t talked about more. Why were there seemingly so little
I was then 15 and my boyfriend was 19 and I said no ... and then I felt defeated and just let it happen every other time
resources for girls like me to access, leaving us (well, me anyway) feeling like I was just overthinking it all? But, according to a 2016-17
Australian Bureau of Statistics report, one in three women experience sexual assault. I couldn’t believe I had to search long and hard for information on something so prevalent.
find some manage to n, I When I did the situatio in re u s a le sick. sort of p guilty and d n a d e m a me by felt ash y betrayed d o b y m e I felt lik me of it. enjoying so
All of the research on sexual assault also repeated that the perpetrator is most often someone known to the victim. My ‘friend’ was not just being a boy. He was a rapist. I refuse to feel guilty and ashamed now that I see the event for what it really was. Being unable to orgasm doesn’t mean I’m fucked up. I’m not damaged goods, and I won’t settle for a mediocre sex life. I’m taking back the power of my mind, body and vagina. Reclaiming this power begins with having conversations. This year I stopped viewing my history as shameful and dirty and began to speak out about my experience. The more I did,
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Jemah Finn
the more I realised just how often shame gets in the way of pleasure (even if someone hasn’t been assaulted). Countless girls have messaged me with similar stories, and the outcome has been astounding. For so long, I thought I was
I love him and I know he wants me. But a t the same ti m enjoying it e I’m not and he kn ows that, it makes h so im not enjo y it either.
alone. But we’re not alone. I will continue to be a loud voice in this quiet conversation, in the hope that girls like me may not have to carry their shame for years on end. Female sexual pleasure isn’t gross or embarrassing, in fact it’s the opposite. All of it – vaginas, orgasms, masturbation – is fucking beautiful. If I had the courage to say this sooner, I may have been much further in my journey to orgasming. Since my assault, I’ve slept with people I care about in safe environments, and it used to shock me that I could never cum. I was attracted to these people, they were doing all the right things. Everything else was working just fine, so why wasn’t my pussy cooperating? But even though my brain might not have been focused on my traumatic past, my vagina sure was. My clit still identifies feelings of pleasure as feelings of harm. In a subconscious act of selfprotection, my body puts up imaginary walls
no idea that this As a man I had ct of sexual could be an impa e t begin to imagin assault. I can no r a woman to what it is like fo a traumatic go through such have it imprint on experience and terwards. her body long af
and cuts off any feeling of arousal from vaginal stimulation. All because of the pain my assaulter once inflicted on me, and the challenges of emotionally processing the assault. But, I’m tired of the foreplay, and I’m close to combusting. This girl needs to orgasm. The pleasure at the end of the tunnel is still some distance away, but every conversation brings it closer. With any luck, the next piece I write will be a how-to guide for orgasming. In the meantime, have the conversation with your loved ones and be conscious of your actions. Happy orgasms to all, Jemah xx
*The text bubbles contain real messages Jemah received from people who have had similar experiences, or who wanted to respond to her story.
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Poetry
Crimson love
the glitter on my face
Words by Zoe Kassiotis
from a drunken day of dancing glimmers in trust as I welcome him in to my sacred home where others only made lust look above my loving bed and you’ll find littered clues of me the tales of my mystic mind: books, unfinished poems, crawling ivy, fallen leaves, day-old tea of some kind and a light that turns from jade to sapphire and ruby red inside my belly ruby glows too not even the crimson tide can part the sea of us for I am a woman now more than ever and he wants me now more than ever stargazing he groans into the maroon towel that declares itself a sheet under my naked bones damp with his sweat, my blood and the pink milk of our love his aquamarine gaze wraps around me like a satin glove I am a river and he is the waves into each other we crash and flow for he knows when I’m bleeding to take me slow one body and two breathless heartbeats tangled beneath the sheets he pours himself into me and a bloody question sneaks is that love swimming in my soft tummy?
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Poetry
A woman’s mark Words by Stephanie Montatore Illustration by Tiana Belperio
When you see
For in a world which so often shames
a woman’s lipstick
the boldness she was built to exude,
marked on her glass,
the kisses she bares
know that it sinks deeper
should remind you that
than the superficial sheen
her voice is here
she wears so proudly.
to stay.
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Songs to CELEBRATE ABORIGINAL ARTISTS Words and photography by Annabel Bowles
@VerseMag Listen to the playlist through our Spotify!
2019 is the International Year of Indigenous Languages. In Australia, there are an estimated 250 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages, but only about 120 are still spoken. Of these languages, around 90 per cent are endangered. This playlist celebrates Australian Aboriginal artists, both passed and living, and their preservation of language, stories and culture through music.
Annabel Bowles
1 Indigenous Land Drmngnow, River Boy 2 Blackfellas Nooky 3 Pukulpa Electric Fields 4 Ngarrikwujeyinama Emily Wurramara 5 Yil Lull Philly 6 January 26 A.B. Original, Dan Sultan 7 Cool As Hell Baker Boy 8 Thulumaay Gii Thelma Plum 9 move up Tasman Keith 10 Black Child Birdz, Mojo Juju 11 The Children Came Back Briggs, Gurrumul, Dewayne Everettsmith 12 Giants Tia Gostelow 13 Guwak (Little Black Bird) Gawurra 14 Black Thoughts Ziggy Ramo 15 Spirit Bird Xavier Rudd
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Narrative
CAFETERIA Words by Kate Newman Illustration by Pippin Ellis
T
he morning sun beams down on the
Instead the space is filled with obnoxious
sterile white floors. Tired students scatter
laughter over inside jokes and weekend
themselves across hard benches and tables,
shenanigans. There’s games of table tennis and
engrossed in morning coffees and Facebook feeds. Everyone is conscious of the steady echo
pool, and moaning over assignment stress. I try to find peace in the noise, drown it out
of the space. It amplifies every scuff of sneakers
to find other details. I notice no two people are
against tile, every patter upon a keyboard, every
the same here. Different ethnicities, religions,
crunch of breakfast wrappers.
and backgrounds eat together. Some are dressed
The girl across from me opens her paper
in suits, while others look just as comfortable
bag painfully slow, almost making the sound
in gym gear. Some students relax in jeans and
worse. There’s a slurp of coffee, a suppressed
t-shirts while others wear coordinated skirts
cough, the quiet hum of fridges, and too-loud
and sundresses.
cafe music. Humans are creatures of noise, I notice.
We share things though, the little signifiers of our own culture. Whether it's
We’re always making sound, even in some
the branded sneakers or the ever-present
small way, constantly. And in a space like this,
smartphones. We share the way we plop down
where the smallest sounds amplify, everyone
our backpacks first before we sit, leaning
turns stiff. They’re sitting too still, moving
forward as the straps slide off our shoulders,
too carefully.
eager to take the weight off.
There’s an unspoken rule to all cafeterias.
We share the way we avoid eye contact
One that is completely arbitrary in that you have
across the room. As if we're not all just people,
to break the rule eventually, but it holds true all
here for the same reason. ◼
the same. The rule is as follows: Sit at least one seat away, and never directly across from anyone you don’t know, until all ‘appropriate’ seats are taken. Just now a student hesitates at the threshold of the seating area. There are vacant seats everywhere, and yet the place is at capacity; he has to break the rule. He searches for the best option. Scanning eyes roam over tired students. He settles next to a girl scrolling through her feed, carefully resting his backpack down. It’s different during the lunch time rush, there’s no space for the rule to exist. Groups of friends crowd around tables, busy students rush to grab their coffees and head to their next class. The long cafe lines twist around packed tables. And just like the rule, those small noises don’t exist here anymore. The suppressed coughs, crunching wrappers, scuffing sneakers and pattering keyboards are drowned out.
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Reflection
WHAT IT ALL COMES DOWN TO Words by Poppy Fitzpatrick
M
y commute to Magill takes almost one
But recently, upon the thousandth revisit
and a half hours each way – a three-hour
of my personal inadequacies and fear of the
round trip. Three years, six semesters,
post-graduation abyss, I heard a voice. As I
three hours, twice a week. That’s approximately
stared vacantly at the grey sky looming above
432 hours (or 18 days) spent with my arse
the southern expressway, still unable to come to
squished against the driver’s seat of my car.
any decisions regarding my life’s path, a slight
I would like to say I spent this portion of my life wisely, but for the most part, it was
break in the cloud cover allowed a tiny ray of sunshine to caress my pasty white forearm.
occupied by: laughing shamelessly at My Dad
I'm broke but I'm happy
Wrote a Porno while stopped at traffic lights;
True.
discussing the evening’s dinner menu with my
I'm poor but I'm kind
mum on speaker phone; finding short-lived
I like to think so.
inspiration through TED Talks (see: How to
The clouds continued to separate as I edged
Tame Your Wandering Mind and other things
my window down. A cool breeze swept away
that I Will Never Do); and enduring abominable
the stuffy air inside my car and sent a wave of
pop hits on commercial radio (I will drive my
goosebumps over my skin. I turned the little
car into said Castle on said Hill).
grey knob clockwise.
But of course, in between such futile attempts at distraction, everyone knows that long drives are the perfect place to think
... I’m young and I’m underpaid I’m tired but I’m working, yeah The bloke in a car to my right seemed
yourself into oblivion. The theme of this year’s
to be tapping his steering wheel to the same
obsessive thought pattern has been fixated on
beat. Was he hearing this too? His lips moved
a scary reality I’ve been forced to acknowledge:
to summarise the exact sentiment of my final
graduation. Because, once you’ve thrown that
university semester:
overpriced square headpiece into the air and people ask, ‘What are you up to these days?’
I'm lost but I'm hopeful, baby. Although I’d like to boast that this spiritual
you’re suddenly unable to rely on the default
experience was delivered personally by the
answer of ‘studying’. What the heck will I do
hand of God – and that the tradie sitting in the
with that parchment? What even is a ‘career’?
overtaking lane understood me on a strangely
How do I pick one? I don’t even know what I
intimate level – we may have to acknowledge
want for lunch.
the power of the crackling radio in my purple
The once comfortable, coddling arms of your tutors will push you out into a world of uncertainty, overwhelming choice and ultimately, unemployment. By now it must seem that my view of the future is somewhat pessimistic. This outlook is strongly encouraged by a number of world issues; rapidly increasing greenhouse gases, microplastics, ongoing armed conflicts, large areas of burning forests, raids on
Fiesta, a long-overdue hit of vitamin D, and the lyrical genius of our beloved Alanis Morissette. Because, folks, that beautiful bitch is right:
What it all boils down to, is that no one’s really got it figured out just yet. ‘Cause I’ve got one hand in my pocket, and the other one’s holding a whopper of a HECS debt. But who the heck cares?
‘Cause everything’s gonna be fine, fine, fine. ◼
journalists, et cetera.
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Shalina Furtado
Interview: Shalina Furtado Interview by Annabel Bowles
Rather than Verse’s traditional graduate Interview, Annabel Bowles chatted to someone who’s found their calling without that piece of parchment. In fact, embroidery unexpectedly came
When did you first start stitching? I started just after Year 12, so about four years ago now. At Spotlight one day I saw a hoop and all this fabric and said to mum ‘What’s this?’ and she’s like ‘Oh you can stitch stuff’, so I was
to Shalina Furtado on a Spotlight trip
like ‘Whatever, I’ll try it.’ The first thing I made
with her mum; now four years later, it’s
was this really dodgy hoop of plants, but I liked
knitted into her busy life as a third-year clinical exercise physiology student.
it. It was therapeutic. Have you always been interested in art? Yeah, but when I was in Year 11 and 12 I didn’t really know what I wanted to do at uni. I thought I wanted to do graphic design or something to do with art, because I used to really like doing watercolour portraiture – like realism more than anything. I’ve always liked painting. At what point did embroidery turn from a hobby into a side-gig? Well I did media in my first year of uni, but stopped because it wasn’t really for me. Then I had a semester off and started sewing a bit more. I sold a few earrings and there were bits and pieces between now and then, but this year it took off after someone I hadn’t met asked me for a commissioned shirt. I’m now taking it a bit more seriously, not to make money but to motivate me to make more things. What do you love about stitching? It’s really therapeutic for me, and to be honest, I haven’t painted or drawn since I started embroidering. I don’t really know why. I think there’s more you can do with stitching, and I’m actually not very creative in the sense that I can’t really think of my own designs. When I was painting and drawing all I would do was look at a photo and paint it, as it was. But I can do more with embroidery; like hoops, clothes and bags, as well as make earrings.
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Interview
What do you normally like to stitch? I do a lot of animals and nature, but I try not to do the same thing all the time; like I always just want to do a snake or a tiger. I try not to do too many floral embroideries too, because there’s just hundreds and hundreds of those on Pinterest. But it’s usually animals, nature, and lately, plants; the perfect thing for those who can’t keep their real plants alive, like me. Is it quite refreshing to do something completely different to your studies? Yeah it’s good, because I didn’t want to lose that creative side I had from school, and I’m glad I’ve continued with it throughout uni. After a full day at uni (and if I’ve done all my uni work) I’ll come home and just relax by doing some embroidery. I can be doing it for three or four hours and the time will just fly; and it feels more productive than just watching a series or something, although sometimes I’ll watch a series while I’m embroidering. The other day I was watching The Handmaid’s Tale while I was stitching and I felt like I was Serena Joy – it can seem pretty domestic sometimes.
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Shalina Furtado
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Interview
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Shalina Furtado
What kind of clothes do you like to embroider on?
Well you’re obviously quite talented if you’re
Hopefully nothing like the handmaid’s robes …
featuring in RAW. Can you tell us about that?
I really like op shopping and I always find
It’s a showcase of all different independent
second-hand things to embroider on, mostly
artists; musicians, make-up artists, painters,
shirts. A while ago I bought these hot pink pants
photographers, and other people who make
and thought they would be so cool to use, but at
handmade things. It’s a one-night exhibition/
the moment they’re just folded away – they’re
market in the beginning of November. One of
pretty obnoxious. So if you know anyone that
my friends who’s a photographer got asked to do
needs some festival pants, let me know. I can’t
it last year, but he said no because you have to
really be bothered with hyped-up festival
sell 20 tickets, and he didn’t think he knew that
outfits; I always just end up wearing the
many people who would go. I was like ‘Hmm I
same thing.
don’t know if I can either,’ but I’m giving it a go. My boyfriend’s really excited about it at least. ◼
Oh me too! And my clothes are so worn out, can I start sending them to you to fix?
RAW is on November 1st at Burnside Ballroom, 6.30pm. For more details go to rawartists.com/
I’m actually like a really bad stitcher in general,
restitched, or check out Shalina’s work at @_restitched
like if I had a hole in something, I wouldn’t know what to do. I wouldn’t do a proper nice neat sew, I’d just do whatever. I have a sewing machine but I’ve never learnt to use it properly. I actually only know two stitching techniques, normal stitching and French knots. But I don’t really think you need to know a lot, it’s more about the blending.
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Humans of UniSA: Edition 31 Everyone has a story. A defining moment of their existence that makes them the person they are today. For Humans of UniSA, we delve into the depths of human nature and speak with some students to discover a slice of their personal history.
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Humans of UniSA
I find that it’s easier to project a message through my art when the face has been concealed. Sometimes I’ll have other components that are a bit obscured too,
Frances Cohen
Bachelor of Contemporary Art
but overall I tend to bring the attention away from a person’s identity. This aspect wasn’t something I was necessarily conscious of initially. It just started to naturally happen. There’s a lot of subtleties and nods to transgenderism in my work. I actually created a
Interview and photography by Tanner Muller
piece recently that depicted this muscular body, with the words ‘she/her’ beside it. I really try to highlight that no matter how you identify, or present yourself, people should be accepting of that. These sorts of bodies actually exist, and no one should make you feel ashamed of who you are. For me, the best way to communicate ideas is to not immediately hit someone in the face with it. You have to be more delicate and allow them to figure it out for themselves. I guess that’s how I’ve been able to make my own work more accessible. Funnily enough, this sort of relates to how I came out to some of the closest people in my life. I never actually admitted anything to them. Over time, I just eased everyone into who I was. Art has become a way of cultivating my own feelings and opinions on the world. It’s become an outlet for me to process something that might be bubbling under the surface. The subtle detailing in my work plays into this a lot, because I might write something controversial across my artwork when I feel as though something needs to be said, or I’ll rip the edges of the paper when I’m feeling angry. It’s the closest thing I have to a journal. Frances is the cover artist of our last magazine, the Sex Edition (#30)
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Humans of UniSA
I’ve always had an affinity with animals, but I didn’t want to be a vet. Fortunately for me, an opportunity came up in commercial operations at the RSPCA, and that’s where I’m at now. On average, every year, about 10,000 animals go through the shelter. My main role is making sure we can fund that.
Ben Dawson
Master of Business Administration
Both my grandfathers were notorious for rescuing animals. My paternal grandfather had pigeons, dogs, and cats. My maternal grandfather was probably even worse with pigs, ducks and sheep, plus all the other normal animals. My sales and business side certainly
Interview and photography by Geena Ho
came from him because he’d always be haggling on prices. But he also had that care for animals, so I think that’s where the worlds collided for him. Growing up, I loved dogs and cats. We had both – budgies as well. Our first pet was a little black cat called Sammy that nobody seemed to want. My grandfather took him in and my mother had an affinity with him. When she moved out of home, Sammy became sad and stopped eating, so my grandfather said ‘You have to take him.’ Mum then took him in and I was born not long after. Sammy lived for about twenty years. My other half is really passionate about animals as well. That’s sort of how we met – at an animal event through my work. We’ve now got three rescue cats and a dog, which our kids have grown up with. There’s also a little rescue farm not far from where we live and we often go down there to visit the goats, horses, pigs, chickens and cats. So our children have sort of picked up on the animal responsibility and compassion as well. At wildlife parks little kids are usually scared of emus, kangaroos and other things, but my little boy is happy for them to walk right up to him (of course with close parental supervision!) I think, from that aspect, he’s definitely got that ‘wildlife warrior’ in him.
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I'm Shamsiya Mohammadi, I’m 22 and I came to Australia as an Afghan refugee at the age of nine. Due to war, my family initially moved to Pakistan, however we still weren’t safe there because we come from a persecuted ethnic minority in both countries. When I arrived here I didn’t know any English. Settling in a new
Shamsiya Mohammadi
country and culture is difficult on its own, and on top of that, a language barrier is one of the most difficult things. Over time, there’s been a
Bachelor of Laws (Honours),
growth in the amount of services available for
Bachelor of Journalism and Professional Writing
migrants and people of non-English speaking backgrounds compared to a decade ago, which
Interview by Ryan Colsey
is great to see. However, there’s still a long way
Photography by Annabel Bowles
to go in terms of policy-making and adopting an inclusive culture across all platforms. The migration and refugee discourse is inherently complex but at its core, it comes down to one simple fact: no one chooses where they’re born, what political system or era they were born in, or the faith they were born into. We don’t get to choose any of that. Some of us get lucky, but unfortunately some of us don’t. The only way to tackle the issue on a human level is to move away from ideologies of fear, and towards the idea of unity. There is more that unites us than what divides us. At the end of the day, to lead good lives for ourselves and pave the way for the generations after us, we all need to and deserve to be safe. What led me into studying law and journalism is the lack of diversity and representation. There are lower numbers of women in both fields and in particular, women of colour. I grew up hardly seeing any Afghan women reading the news, or appearing on TV in general. Media and the law are some of the most influential platforms, and in order for all voices to be heard, it’s important that our media and our laws are representative of the diversity in our nation.
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Photo Essay
Home Words and photography by Lok
H
ong Kong is full of buildings, traffic, food
Other people may have three meals a day,
and people. It’s a densely populated city
but in Hong Kong, we have six – breakfast,
with over seven million people on a small
morning tea, lunch, afternoon tea, dinner and
peninsula. I was born and raised there, and
late-night food (as well as street food 24/7).
although I came to Australia in 2013, Hong Kong
Food is paramount, no matter your lifestyle.
is of utmost importance to me. There is no other
Fusing cuisines from different cultures and
place like it.
making them our own is Hong Kong’s special forte (pineapple buns and milk tea FTW). All
Although it’s one of the busiest cities in the
meals are placed in the middle of the group
world, Hong Kong is full of compassion and
you’re sharing it with, and food is forced into
humanity. We may be ‘physically’ close in the
one another’s bowls, even if you don’t want it.
city’s crowded streets, but we’re also connected
Food is the source of love and hate, especially
in care and support for each other – even if
in families. The bill at the end is always a cause
we’re not all originally from Hong Kong, or no
of ‘polite’ conflict, in which the loser may cut
longer live there.
off the rest of the family and refuse to eat with them again. I’m not joking; it’s all out of love.
In English, the word ‘neighbour’ applies only to people who live near you. But the word
Such is the simple and humble everyday lives
‘neighbour’ (gai fong) in Cantonese applies
of Hong Kongers. At the end of the day, our only
to everyone you see on the street, and I mean
desire is to live the most ordinary life in its
anyone, from the security to the lady at the fish
fullest – work to raise our families, and come
market. My mom loves to bake and often offers
home to food and time with loved ones.
some of her homemade bread to the guards. She sometimes carries a few extra sweets in
Hong Kong will always have a special place in
case she bumps into someone she knows on the
my heart. Please don’t take this special place
street. It’s so easy to have a conversation with
from us before its expiry date.
the vendors in the market; you feel like they’re part of your family, and you even know some of their family secrets.
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Lok
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Photo Essay
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Lok
Everything has its own expiry date: food, tools,
We’re under threat of losing our language,
life and even freedom.
culture, human rights and freedom of
What’s guaranteed isn’t guaranteed forever.
speech. Since June 2019, we Hong Kongers
What can you do before these things expire?
have been fighting for what is right. We have
If you’re sick, you can visit the doctor.
cried and suffered, stuck in frustration as our
If your tools become worn or rusty, you can
government’s promises have been broken over
sharpen or oil them.
and over again.
But what can you do when it comes to democracy and freedom?
During this period, we have seen different
When you are facing someone who refuses to
roles in society transform.
listen or respond?
From protectors to attackers. From authorities to subdued followers.
We speak up, we stand strong, support one
From high school and university students
another, hold our brothers and sisters tight, and
to defenders of the city.
keep our heads held high. We maintain hope
From everyday citizens to new leaders of
that justice will finally prevail.
our home.
The 50-year promise. One country, two systems
We’re left to suffer ruthless attacks from the
– that Hong Kong will maintain its own law
white T-shirt gang – a group of thugs who
system, financial and trade agreements, and
indiscriminately attack protestors and civilians
relations with foreign countries. However, the
– and policemen who storm the streets. They
One country has broken this promise, and our
keep their identity hidden with reflective masks
leader is no longer a leader.
and no numbers or badges. You can’t even see the eyes of your attacker.
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Photo Essay
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From citizen vs citizen, to citizens vs the state.
This community doesn’t just include the people in Hong Kong, but Hong Kongers all around the
But even in moments of crisis, the people of
globe. We are all united together. We keep on
Hong Kong still hold onto their character. They
fighting and utilising every possibility to stand
still love and care for one another.
in solidarity for Hong Kong, because we love and care for our home, our brothers and sisters,
A sense of community is maintained by small
and our family. We are all connected and we will
generous gestures. People leave free tickets
never lose the spirit of what makes us
and coins next to the subway ticket machines
Hong Kongers.
to ensure others have a safe passage home. They buy meal credits for the next person and
I am proud to be a Hong Konger.
volunteer to clean the streets after protests.
#standwithHK #香港人加油
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Photography
Neon Nights in Hong Kong Enrico Becker
Capturing this vertical city’s vibrant ambience, intimate spaces, and constant feeling of restlessness on Cinestill 800T film.
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Photography
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Why India gives me hope for the world Words by Thomas Kelsall Photography by Connor Foley
Thomas Kelsall
A
nyone with even a cursory knowledge of my
living in extreme poverty (218 million) – would
personality would know I have difficulty
do little to cure my existential frustrations.
finding reasons for optimism about the
To be clear, the human hardship you observe
current state of the world. Perhaps it’s because our society is defined
is confronting and hard to escape, and a visit to some of the worst-hit regions can elicit
by economic inequalities so large in scale that
feelings of shock, helplessness, even anger.
they are almost impossible to conceptualise.
However, what you also observe is the enormous
In 2018, 26 people owned as much wealth as the
resilience of the human spirit, an ability to
bottom half of the world’s population. Or maybe
rebound from circumstances that are beyond
it’s something to do with the deteriorating state
our worst imagination.
of democracy worldwide; over the last 15 years,
Take Matea, a tour guide who works for
the number of people living under dictatorship
the Salaam Baalak Trust in Delhi. Before the
rose to 3.3 billion, an increase of over a billion
age of 15, both of Matea’s parents had died from
people. A further 24.9 million people are the
drug overdoses, and she had her leg broken after
voiceless victims of human trafficking;
being run over by a car. When all seemed lost,
a $150 billion industry which demonstrates the
the Salaam Baalak Trust gave Matea access to
persistence of modern-day slavery.
a shelter home and a safe bed at night. She now
Sri Lanka and Christchurch reminded us
works for the trust, relentlessly striving to give
that we’re still in a seemingly never-ending
a new generation of disadvantaged children a
terrorism cycle, inflamed by demagogues who
pathway out of poverty. Still only 17, Matea told
stoke fears about migration from the Middle
us of her dreams to become a flight attendant,
East; a region currently ravaged by two horrific
and those of us who had the pleasure of meeting
civil wars in Syria and Yemen. The latter
her will never forget her story.
involves atrocious Saudi Arabian war crimes
The kids who live at the centre also
that the governments of the US, the UK and
displayed an infectious level of happiness that
Australia continue to supply weapons for.
was in stark contrast to the horrific situation
Oh, and those last three governments I mentioned, how are they all going? Donald Trump’s erratic first term as
they came from. The joy they greeted us into their classroom with and their untempered excitement to defeat us in a thumb war or show
President, the utter mess of Brexit and the
off their dance moves was humbling: enough to
relentless backstabbing of Australian PMs has
take my mind off the visible marks of abuse on
reassured us that the ‘civilised’ democracies of
their body.
the West have got it all under control. To top it
This kind of hospitality is par for the
all off, we have less than 11 years to take action
course and perhaps best summed up by an
on climate change before its catastrophic effects
anecdote from Dr Prince Solomon, a social work
become irreversible.
professor who oversaw a student placement
I could pursue this demoralising
project to build houses for a tribal community in
tangent for countless paragraphs, but I would
rural Chennai. While the students were building
rather discuss how an unlikely trip to the
the houses with the locals, the community
subcontinent has given me some much-
genuinely questioned why the makeshift huts
needed hope for the future.
included doors, as ‘why would I need a door
One would think that travelling to India –
when I want everyone to feel welcome?’
the country with the highest number of people
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In this sense, Rita is the true essence of the India I saw: a country of herculean individual efforts in the face of overwhelming structural problems. It’s the university student bizarrely trying to sell you children’s books to fund their education; it’s the rickshaw driver working all day for less than $10 pay while having his market undercut by Uber; it’s the small business owner who has come from war-torn Kashmir to sell scarves at a Delhi market. Sometimes it can be hard to imagine It was in moments like these where you
any of these problems improving, especially
realised whatever you were stressing about was
when 26 million babies are added to India’s
pretty insignificant. As Connor Foley, another
population each year. But the more people you
student on the study tour, said later that night,
talk to, the more you get the impression that the
‘if they can smile, so can we.’ When you observe
young people are going to drive India towards
the lengths some Indians go to help each other
progressive change.
and their community, it gives you a certain level
The sense of optimism you gain from
of reassurance about what’s actually at the core
speaking to India’s youth is hard to put into
of human nature.
words, so I defer to former New York Times
Ms Rita Panicker, the founder of Butterflies
columnist and second-generation American
India, is another person who embodies the
immigrant Anand Giridharadas, who penned
kindness of Indian culture. Since its inception
this description of his return to India.
in 1989, Butterflies has helped Indian kids find
‘As I travelled the land, the data did not
their voice through various outreach programs,
fit the framework. The children of the lower
including floating schools, street education,
castes were hoisting themselves up one
resilience centres, sports programs and a
diploma and training program at a time,’
children-run development bank which teaches
Mr Giridharadas wrote.
financial management skills. Rita gained inspiration for Butterflies
‘The young people were finding in their cell phones a first zone of individual identity. The
while talking to abandoned children on the
couples were ending marriages no matter what
streets of Mumbai. Since then, over 70,000
‘society’ thinks, then finding love again.
children have been supported thanks to her
‘The vegetarians were embracing meat and
imagination and desire to make a difference.
meat-eaters were turning vegetarian, defining
Rita’s story epitomises everything that is
themselves by taste and faith, not caste … it is
so hard to grapple about India. Making a
a shift in psychologies, and you rarely meet an
difference in the lives of 70,000 people is a truly
Indian untouched by it.’
superhuman effort, but the scale of the problem
One can sense a younger generation
is so enormous it hardly bears thinking about –
finding their own way and slowly breaking free
there are nearly 30 million abandoned children
from old cultural rigidities.
in India.
Every month, a million people turn 18 in
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Thomas Kelsall
India, and the country is home to more than 420 million people aged between 15 and 34. Unfortunately, the three-week glimpse I had can only be described as a surface-level view, and it’s something I’ve had to grapple with constantly while reflecting on my time over there. Extrapolating from anecdotal experience can only take you so far, particularly in a country with 29 states, seven territories, 22 official languages, 1.3 billion people and a seemingly infinite number of cultures. And it must be said that the political landscape of India remains incredibly grim. With this year’s re-election of Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, the Indian people chose to continue down the path of far-right Hindu nationalism; and the issues of corruption, press freedom and Kashmir persist. In terms of the depressing global trends I mentioned earlier, India fares much worse than most other countries. A staggering 73 per cent of India’s wealth is in the hands of the country’s top one per cent of earners, and their tense political climate means they continue to slip down the world democracy index. Estimates for the number of Indian human trafficking victims range in the tens of millions, and the country ranks third for global C02 emissions with 22 of the world’s 30 most polluted cities. But what gives me hope for the future is the resilience, optimism and vigour those I met in India took towards solving these problems. It gives you a new outlook on the type of attitude needed to tackle the enormous structural inequalities we face in society. For that alone, I owe India a huge debt of gratitude. ◼
* This is an adaptation of a story that was originally published by On The Record, UniSA’s student-run news site, on May 12th 2019. * All sources are hyperlinked within this story’s online version on ontherecordunisa.com.au
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Ask your Candidates
Stephanie Montatore
USASA Elections are here & it’s time to Ask Your Candidates about the issues that matter to you. Magill Reps & Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Student Rep Wednesday 9 October, 12 - 1 pm Magill Student Lounge (A Building)
Mawson Lakes Reps & Postgraduate Student Rep Thursday 10 October, 12 - 1 pm Mawson Lakes (the Hive)
City East Reps & International Student Rep Wednesday 16 October, 12 - 1 pm City East Student Lounge (A Building)
City West Rep & President Thursday 17 October, 12 - 1 pm City West Student Lounge (CS Building)
Ask a question or just listen. All students welcome. Find out more at USASA.sa.edu.au/Election
MATCH STUDIO: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE TABOO
Words by Emily Draper Illustrations by Deana Bogojevic
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The social stigma and discrimination surrounding mental health is one of the main reasons people struggle to speak out about their issues. This stigma leaves many reluctant to reveal their problems and ultimately reject
According to the
Black Dog Institute, almost half of all Australians will experience a mental illness at some point in their life. However, mass media remains one of the public’s primary sources of mental health awareness, and often, it
the idea of seeking help and treatment.
portrays homogenised stereotypes of these
But with the emergence of modern disciplines
illnesses. For instance, films, TV shows
like Communication Design, both designers
and commercial news stories often portray
and mental health practitioners are able
mental illness sufferers as volatile, cowardly,
to uniquely educate and challenge public
or attention-seeking. These inaccurate
perception on aspects of mental health.
representations may strengthen someone’s
While still not widely recognised by many in
fear to speak out; which, in a society that has a
the psychological field, design campaigns have
limited understanding of mental health, can be
been increasingly successful in destigmatising
a reasonable concern. On the other hand, there
the topic, demonstrating how mental health
is nearly no apprehension in speaking openly
is just as important and prevalent as other
about physical illnesses. Physical illnesses
physical disorders and illnesses.
are inherently easy to identify, whereas ideas
Match Studio’s Visualising Mental Health has
on mental illnesses, such as anxiety and
helped to demonstrate the importance of a
depression, have only been recognised in recent
design approach to mental health through its
decades. These differences underpin the stigma
various student-led projects. The program
of mental health; to the point where many
partners third-year Communication Design
people, still to this day, simply do not believe
students with professional psychologists
these illnesses exist. This taboo ultimately leads
to design concepts that encourage open
people to internalise their struggles, which in
conversation on mental health.
many cases can be particularly harmful.
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Match Studio
Match Studio is actively breaking
concept created by Sarah Fazzini, Ethan
down stereotypes and stigma of mental
Haylock, Sarae Morella and Isabella Whittaker
health through its Visualising Mental Health
(which you can read about in Edition 27).
initiative, which encourages students to design
Both designs invite people to not only open
conversation-prompting products. Tok Tea,
up to others, but to themselves, which can
created by Adam Lockier, Chloe Grimes, Leigh
help them evaluate and make better sense of
Down and Olivia Hill in collaboration with
scenarios where mental health challenges may
Match Studio, is one such project. Tok Tea is
arise. Speaking openly about these issues, even
a packaged tea product that is designed to
in subtle ways, also helps to normalise the
facilitate conversation about uncomfortable
language of mental health and demonstrate just
feelings and emotions. Each tea bag’s tag has
how common these difficulties are.
a question on it that elicits a conversation
Breaking down the stigma of mental
about one of four emotions – joy, anger, fear,
health is something society desperately needs
and sadness – in a friendly and non-invasive
to address. As Communication Design and
way. With open questions such as 'What always
other areas of visual communication play
cheers you up when you’re upset?' and 'What’s
pivotal roles in society’s perceptions of mental
the silliest thing you’ve gotten angry about?'
health, it’s through such disciplines that we can
individuals have the ability to decide how much
illustrate different realities of mental health,
or how little they want to share, and this sense
as well as demonstrate how common these
of control over the conversation can feel very
struggles are. The projects involved in Match
empowering. The product also helps introduce
Studio’s Visualising Mental Health initiative are
conversation on mental health in a casual,
great examples of how design can challenge
intimate setting – which may be preferred over
society’s norms and normalise mental health
a clinical setting.
in everyday settings.
Tok Tea is just one example in Match
The 2019 Visualising Mental Health projects
Studio’s Visualising Mental Health initiative that
will be on display from October 8th to 23rd, in
challenges the stigma of mental health.
the Samstag Museum of Art, Hawke Building. ◼
Another is the Let's Deal With It game; a product
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Let’s talk politics
Artwork by Lily Roberts
1) What are the most important issues to your Club? 2) What's your club's view on free speech at University campuses? 3) Why does your club think it's important to be politically engaged in 2019?
University of South Australia Liberal Club 1.
3.
We are devoted to ensuring the efficient running
With the outstanding re-election of the
of USASA to make sure that it finally operates as
Morrison Coalition Government this year and
a service for all students at UniSA. The same can
the election of the Marshall Liberal Government
be said for the NUS (National Union of Students)
last year, Liberal students are in an excellent
which, rather than looking after the interests
position to help fundamentally transform
of students, pursues a radical political agenda.
our Nation and State for the betterment of all
Responsible use of resources, such as the SSAF,
Australians. This can only be achieved through
which is paid by every student (and all too often
Liberal policies. By working with the Liberal
wasted), is something we are also passionate
Club, students can gain first-hand political
about as a club. Finally, freedom – such as the
experience which can allow them to have their
freedom to join or to not join a student union/
say in how this miraculous transformation
association – is something that generations
takes place. Being the Party of Government at
of Liberal Students have stood up for and is a
both levels, it is only through the Liberal Club
tradition that we are proud to uphold.
that politically minded students can have their
2.
views represented and heard by those in the highest levels of office in our great Country.
As a young University Club representing Liberal students on campus, we consider freedom of speech and open discussion to be of utmost importance in creating a healthy university environment, considering that university is the birthplace of many different economic, social and philosophical points of view. Students should not be made to feel scared or intimidated by radical leftists for voicing an opinion or view that is considered to be right-wing. Therefore, as a Club, we provide Liberal Students a platform and a safe space to voice and debate their opinions and views.
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UniSA Labor Club 1.
3.
We strive for a fair and equitable Australia
It sounds cliché, but be the change you want to
by supporting issues which affect the daily
see in the world. Young people are increasingly
lives of students. Most students, regardless of
disillusioned with politics because their views
whether they have paid work or not, are often
aren’t reflected by those in power. Being
reliant on payments from Centrelink; but Youth
politically engaged makes your voice heard, and
Allowance, Austudy and Newstart are severely
there are so many ways to achieve that in your
below the poverty line. We're a highly educated
own way: vote for candidates who share your
generation being exploited through underpaid
beliefs and have kept their promises; sit down
insecure employment. It's no surprise that
and talk to people in power by lobbying them;
youth mental health issues are on the rise.
be an activist who puts up posters and goes to
This is why people should join their relevant
protests. Every decision made by our lawmakers
union. We also advocate a return to free higher
affects everyone – it's no accident that wages
education so young people start their careers
are low, employment is unstable, and the gap
debt-free. Overall, we want students to be
between rich and poor is growing.
safe and feel supported on campus regardless of their backgrounds, and be given equitable opportunities for success.
2. Freedom of speech is not freedom from consequence. Allowing opinions which promote division based on misinformation only makes such views more acceptable, and gradually they become normalised. History has repeatedly shown that preying on people’s fears can result in mass brutality and oppression. One skill we can all learn from uni is that research and critical thinking are applicable beyond assignments; back up your facts with peerreviewed studies, not tweets. We’re all here to learn, and universities have a responsibility to ensure that students feel safe enough to study. Racism, sexism, queerphobia and all forms of hatred must be always be condemned. Stand up to people who want to restrict rights and opportunities to those who have historically been denied them.
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Let's talk politics
Socialist Alternative UniSA 1.
3.
As socialists we want to overthrow the whole
The world has never been more unequal; the
rotten system of Capitalism! This insane world
racist attacks on migrants and refugees are
based on profit over human life. A particularly
accelerating and Australia is leading the way.
pressing issue today is the impending
The racists are politically engaged. The coal
environmental catastrophe. Greta Thunberg –
bosses and politicians who are destroying our
the 16-year-old who sparked the global Climate
planet are politically engaged. Our side needs to
Strike movement – was right when she said we
be too, in order to fight them. One step towards
should act like our house is on fire. She was also
that is taking a leaf out of Extinction Rebellion
right when she placed the blame of this crisis
and the School Strike for Climate’s book. Beyond
firmly in the hands of the rich and powerful, the
that, if you want to get involved, check out
coal bosses and politicians. Today in Australia,
our paper at redflag.org.au and message us on
we’re seeing not the desperately needed halt
Facebook @SocialistAlternativeAdelaide.
to coal and oil, but an expansion of fossil fuels with the Adani coal mine. We’re seeing the Labor government in Queensland shamefully penalising Extinction Rebellion protesters for fighting for the planet.
2. We are for free speech, standing in the long socialist tradition of defending democratic rights against authoritarians and bureaucrats. Universities are increasingly authoritarian, so it’s important to fight their repressive powers. On campus there are powerful institutions that restrict opinions expressed at Uni. Protests on campus can be forcefully stopped. Posters or leaflets can be banned. Academic departments can be defunded based on the whims of Uni management. Staff members can be dismissed from their jobs, or prevented from expressing their political opinions (like we’ve seen in the racist Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation). Standing for free speech means defending the existence of student/staff organisations, the right to protest on campus without being fined/ punished, and the rights of staff to express political opinion.
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Review: Existential Threats Words by Ryan Colsey Illustrations by Oliver White
Afterpay
Uber Eats
Impact: Destructive
Impact: Calamitous
If that Facebook post your
Is it a bird? Is it a plane?
auntie shared is anything
No, it’s your Macca's meal
to go by, Afterpay will bring
deal being transported via an
about the demise of us all.
Uber Elevate hovercraft!
Thanks to this capitalist trap,
As technology evolves, people
our generation can now spend
devolve; a point highlighted
even more on material goods
by the fact that we’re now not
without actually earning the
only too lazy to cook food, but
money to afford them. This
too lazy to go get it. The faster
could end up leaving every
Uber Eats expands, the faster
young person vulnerable to
we will forget how the human
debt and stern judgement from
body is even supposed to move.
their multiple-home-owning
Eventually we will spend our
parents. Whether it’s a dress,
remaining days bedridden,
a drink bottle, or the sovereign
reduced to washing our
territory of Greenland,
800-pound whale-like bodies
humans will start buying
with a rag on a stick.
anything and everything with Afterpay, and consumerism will go into overdrive.
Ryan Colsey
Avocado
Instagram hiding likes
Verse Magazine
Impact: Disastrous
Impact: Cataclysmic
Impact: Apocalyptic
The year is 2030 and the
Earlier this year, Instagram
We’re breaking the fourth wall
market has crashed so badly
decided it would hide the
for this one. Students have
that houses are now valued
number of likes visible
reportedly become so hooked
at merely two thirds of the
on people’s posts, leaving
on reading Verse that the
average smashed avo on rye.
thousands of ‘influencers’
magazine has been classified
There are millions of empty
without … influence? With
by ASIO as more addictive
affordable houses available
people now not knowing which
than heroin, morphine and
just waiting to be occupied,
European model to vicariously
listening to ABBA combined.
but every millennial still
‘live through’, panic will ensue
Reports have emerged
alive refuses to live in them.
and before we know it, society
revealing that readers are
Instead, brunch has become
as a whole will descend into
dying of starvation as they’re
the epitome of wealth, and the
total anarchy. It’s projected
refusing to eat or do anything
millennial is dedicating their
that if Instagram doesn’t stop
other than read Verse.
entire income to consuming
hiding like figures, users will
No aviation students have
as much avocado as humanly
start using Myspace again –
been affected though, owing
possible. In the process, the
a truly cataclysmic outcome.
to their inability to read. May
entire global economy is
those that have passed due
brought to a grinding halt.
to excessive reading rest in peace; but at least they died knowing which obscure sex position their star sign represents.
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Horoscopes
THE SIGNS AS GAME CHANGERS Words by Geena Ho
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Geena Ho
ARIES
TAURUS
GEMINI
Vincent van Gogh
Mark Zuckerberg
Marilyn Monroe
•
Exclusively uses colour-coded
•
Posts ambiguous
•
•
Will take a Netflix date over a
•
Mismatched socks all
•
Goes on Macca’s run just for
•
Excited by stickers
21 Mar – 19 Apr
sticky notes party any day a McFlurry
20 Apr – 20 May
Facebook statuses the time
21 May – 20 Jun
• •
Signature is just writing their name Always taking photos Actually believes in horoscopes
CANCER
LEO
VIRGO
23 Jul – 22 Aug
23 Aug – 22 Sep
Shane Dawson
Neil Armstrong
Beyoncé
•
Has conspiracy theories
•
•
‘Nah we don’t need to ask
• •
•
Snoozes alarm ten times
21 Jun – 22 Jul
about everything for directions’
• •
Won’t stop talking about the one time they went overseas Has extremely high standards Scared of heights
•
Good taste in fashion *Adds $100 worth of clothes to cart* *Refuses to pay $4.95 for shipping* ‘I only drink soy lattes’
LIBRA
SCORPIO
SAGITTARIUS
Kim Kardashian
Captain James Cook
Bruce Lee
• •
•
• • •
23 Sep – 22 Oct
•
Replies to texts by calling you Serial ‘feeling cute, might delete later’ Never reads instructions
23 Oct – 21 Nov
• •
Travel wishlist: High. Travel funds: Low. Loves museum dates Picnic aesthetic is on-point
22 Nov – 21 Dec
Acts tough but is a big sweetheart Actually likes the beep test Has to have the last word
CAPRICORN
AQUARIUS
PISCES
LeBron James
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Albert Einstein
•
Won’t let you forget they were
•
•
Makes a point of reversing
• • •
•
Always in shorts
22 Dec – 19 Jan
on TV once into car parks
20 Jan – 18 Feb
Sings in the shower Bakes in spare time Spends ten minutes curating
the perfect playlist for a five
minute drive
19 Feb – 20 Mar
• •
Actually measures ingredients when cooking Loves a good meat pie Almost failed maths
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USASA
USASA Club Feature: AYCC
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AYCC
T
he Australian Youth Climate Coalition
would be illegal in their home country.
(AYCC) is Australia’s largest youth-run
Why should they be allowed to do it in
organisation. Our mission is to build a
our backyards?!
movement of young people leading solutions to the climate crisis!
Stop Adani: Adani is a mining company that’s set to
Our vision is for a just and sustainable world,
build the Carmichael coal mine in the north
with a safe climate for our generation and future
of the Galilee Basin, Central Queensland.
generations to come.
Ensuring that the coal mine does not go ahead is absolutely critical in order to ensure that we
We believe the only way to solve the climate
have a clean climate future, as not only would
crisis is through a social movement led by young
it contribute to global warming – which in turn
people; standing in solidarity with those on the
contributes to the ill health of our wonderful
frontlines of climate change; empowering our
ecosystems, including the Great Barrier Reef
community; inspiring change; and holding the
– it will also draw water from Queensland’s
decision makers of our community to account.
water reserves. This would have a direct impact on local farmers, as well as Australian flora
We work side by side with our sister
and fauna. Through grassroot campaigns and
organisation, Seed, which is Australia’s first
empowering youth, we are striving to stop
Indigenous youth climate network. Together,
Adani from going ahead with the Carmichael
we run grassroot campaigns that fight for
coal mine.
climate justice. Origin Energy Campaign: Whilst AYCC has been around for about a
Fracking in the Northern Territory goes beyond
decade, AYCC at UniSA was only established
being an environmental concern, as it is first
in 2017, but already it’s an integral part of the
and foremost a land rights issue. We stand in
South Australian branch of the Australian
solidarity with First Nations People and Seed
Youth Climate Coalition. While we operate at
to let Origin Energy know that we’re calling for
a university level, all of our campaign efforts
a total ban on fracked shale gas. Dirty energy
are carried out as a close-knit team with the
and dirty money do not take priority over the
rest of the state’s branch, which includes the
protection of country and thousands of years of
AYCC clubs from the University of Adelaide and
vibrant culture.
Flinders University. We also work with other AYCC branches from all over Australia.
How you can get involved with fighting the good fight alongside other wholesome youth?
OUR CURRENT CAMPAIGNS
Find us on social media! Give our Facebook page
Fight for the Bight:
@AYCCatUniSA a like, follow the sign-up link
Despite the Great Australian Bight being a
and watch that space for new upcoming events!
vital part of our ecosystem that we absolutely
Or simply come say hi to either any of our AYCC
cannot afford to lose, Equinor (a Norwegian
team if you see them around campus! ◼
energy company) is trying to receive approval to drill for oil in the Bight. Along with the Great Australian Bight Alliance, we’re fighting to ensure that Equinor knows young people in South Australia do not see a future for big oil in the Great Australian Bight. And here’s the catch – Equinor’s scheme to drill for oil in the Bight
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October & November
What’s On October 8 UniTopia - City West 9 UniTopia - City East 11 Showpony Open Mic - Showpony 11 Industrial Design Quiz Night 15 UniTopia - Mawson Lakes 16 UniTopia - Magill 18 Halloween Spooktacular - UniSA Rainbow Club 18 UniSA Business Ball 2019 - Business Schools 18 Just ‘PLANE’ Drunk - ASO Pub Crawl SP5 18 Reasons to Date a Med Rad Student - Med Rad Pubcrawl 26 Psychology Ball - UniSA Psychology Society 31 Stigma Smashing Spook-tacular - batyr Ambassadors Self Care Society
November 2 UniSA Clinical Exercise Physiology Industry Conference 2019 5 Let’s Talk About Sex at Magill - UniSA Rainbow Club 20 Raves Before Raids Pubcrawl 22 2019 PSS Grad Ball @ Adelaide Zoo 29 The Annual Exhibition - Architecture & Interior Architecture Club 30 2019 Medical Radiation Sciences Ball - Med Radical Club
Recurring Events Monthly UniSA Art Club Weekly Magill Lunch Project Weekly Bible Talks - UniSA City Evangelical Students Weekly Music Lovers Rehearsals Weekly Overseas Christian Fellowship Weekly Sessions Weekly SP5 UniSA Ballet Classes Beginners to Advanced Intermediate to Advanced Beginners
Check out these events and more at USASA.sa.edu.au/Events
USASA PRESIDENT'S LETTER Thank you and good luck!
By the time you’re reading this, your exams are most likely around the corner – so good luck to everyone, you’re so close! This is my last President’s Letter, and I would like to thank anyone who has spent some time throughout their hectic year to flick through an edition. It’s been such an amazing experience and a privilege to serve the UniSA student cohort as your USASA President for 2019. I’m so proud to have seen our pilot financial counselling service roll-out successfully, and awareness of our academic advocacy team increase. I’m also proud to say that we can now support clubs more than ever with the new tiered-
representative, Kate Riggall. She has greatly
funding initiative.
supported me in my role and has worked extensively with the University over the last
Whether you’re aware of USASA or not, we
two years in advocating for improved policy
engage with thousands of students across all
and procedures in the area of sexual assault
of our campuses to ensure that everyone’s
and harassment. There is no stronger advocate
experience at UniSA is that bit more enjoyable.
on this important issue and I appreciate all the
Hopefully, some of you have interacted with
time she has taken out of her own study to ensure
our amazing staff and volunteers at a number
a safer university community for everyone.
of our events, such as; the infamous Pac Crawl Pub Crawl earlier in the year; our bi-annual
It has been such a rewarding year in my role
UniTopia event on all four metro campuses; and
as the President of USASA and I hope that my
more recently, the unveiling of student art at
position has played some part in bettering
City West (which you can find if you walk from
experiences for our students. Thank you to all of
the pedestrian crossing towards the Sir Hans
the fantastic USASA staff who work tirelessly to
Heysen Building).
keep this organisation delivering for students, and a big, big thank you to everyone who has
I would also like to thank all of the other USASA
supported me throughout the year! It has been
board representatives who put up their hand
an experience I won’t ever forget.
to become actively involved as a student leader this year. They’ve ensured that more students
With love,
like you have a say in what USASA can do as a
Grace Dixon
student-run association for our fellow cohorts. I must also specially acknowledge the ongoing commitment and hard work of former PostGraduate representative and current Magill
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Along with our media mates, UniCast Radio and On The Record, we’re throwing a pub crawl! Come and loosen up your 'duttons' with us on Wednesday 20th November. Head to @VerseMagazine to find all the deets (and maybe even a special discount code)!
Edition 31 2019
The Cumby West Oak The Austral Sugar
USASA Academic Advocacy
Free, confidential & independent advice. Advocates help you to pursue your rights on a wide range of academic troubles & can increase your chances of receiving a positive outcome. To book an appointment visit USASA.sa.edu.au/Advocacy
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