POWER WITH Anthology

Storytelling for health justice with the RELATE Lab at OHSU Family Medicine

Two people wearing medical masks look towards a computer monitor in a healthcare setting

ABOUT

I co-produced the POWER WITH Anthology with Elaine Waller Uchison, in my role as a multimedia intern at the RELATE Lab at OHSU Family Medicine. Working both collaboratively and independently, we created short films about community members’ experiences with health and healthcare.

We harnessed the power of stories to impart understanding, break barriers, and offer solace. By employing less-extractive reporting methods, we created space for people to share their stories in a manner that is healing and affirming. With our Storytellers Bill of Rights, we affirmed that interview subjects are the ones in charge of how their story is told.

By telling individuals’ stories, we intended to promote understanding of the complexity of identity and lived experience, to help people to feel less alone in the challenges that they face, to foster connection, and to humanize multifaceted issues in healthcare and society.

PROCESS

Our approach is best described as scrappy and resourceful. We pitched and pursued our own stories, seeking out community members in our networks and through intensive research.

When it came to capturing footage, we were similarly dogged. Whether it was hanging out the window of a moving vehicle with a C70, switching to an unimposing iPhone when folks are nervous about being filmed at a free vision clinic, or simulating a two-camera interview after driving 1.5 hours before realizing one camera has dead batteries, we always found a way to get the shot.

Post-production was evenly divided, with one of us taking lead on every other story. Each film went through multiple reviews, including input from our larger steering committee.

I developed the POWER WITH illustration style to unite the series’ diverse stories into a cohesive whole. Rotoscoped line drawings created visual interest while also slightly obscuring identity. This decision allowed viewers to examine their assumptions about the person depicted in the thumbnail after experiencing their story (Did they expect the man in the lab coat to be white? How did it feel to realize he wasn’t?) and, perhaps, to put themselves in the shoes of the person whose story is being told.

POWER WITH Trailer

Produced by Jenni Denekas

Videography by Jenni Denekas & Elaine Waller Uchison

Animation & Illustration by Jenni Denekas

Toren, a POWER WITH story

Produced by Elaine Waller Uchison

Videography by Jenni Denekas

Animation & Illustration by Jenni Denekas & Elaine Waller Uchison

Ricardo, a POWER WITH story

Produced by Jenni Denekas

Videography by Jenni Denekas, Aaron Horowitz & Elaine Waller Uchison

Animation & Illustration by Jenni Denekas

Andrea, a POWER WITH story

Produced by Elaine Waller Uchison

Videography by Jenni Denekas & Elaine Waller Uchison

Illustration by Jenni Denekas

Deidré, a POWER WITH story

Produced by Elaine Waller Uchison

Videography by Jenni Denekas & Elaine Waller Uchison

Illustration by Jenni Denekas

Ariah, a POWER WITH story

Produced by Jenni Denekas

Videography by Jenni Denekas & Elaine Waller Uchison

Illustration & Animation by Jenni Denekas