• Prologue: Who was Sister Nan Reay and why is her story so significant in 2022?

  • Jul 8 2022
  • Length: 9 mins
  • Podcast

Prologue: Who was Sister Nan Reay and why is her story so significant in 2022?

  • Summary

  • "Einstein was right – time really is relative. Weeks feel like years and also like minutes at the same time"


    Dispatches from the Frontline brings you podcasts from the diary of World War 1 nurse. At the same time, they also are a recording of how three artists re-directed their creative energies at home, on rehearsing on zoom and recording and editing on audacity during Melbourne’s lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 at the height of the Coronavirus pandemic.


    The Great War lasted four years (1914-1918). Everyone thought it was going “to be over by Christmas”. At the beginning of 2020, the world was asking the same question. How long will our “war on the pandemic” last? As we recorded the Sister Nan Reay’s descriptions of tending to the wounded soldiers from the trenches, we noticed how the language of war had become the current parlance of 2020. We were facing “the war on Covid”, the “frontline”, the “battle against the coronavirus” and daily reminders of how to survive our “war on Covid”. It seems that our language has not changed in over 104 years. In fact, the survival practices of keeping people alive – good hygiene, quality care, respect, tolerance and humour are enduring human qualities to help us survive.


    For more information on Dispatches from the Frontline project, go to: www.dispatchesfromthefrontline.org


    Dispatches from the Frontline is brought to you by:

    Geraldine Cook-Dafner – Narrator

    Naomi Edwards - Director

    Alex Dafner – Voice recording and editing

    Zoltan Fecso – Music composition, sound design and editing

    Tristan Meecham – Creative Producer, All the Queen’s Men

    Image – Sarah Corridon


    Dispatches from the Frontline is supported by funding from the Public Record Office Victoria, Creative Victoria and Regional Arts Victoria


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.