Archive/“Sometimes It’s Easier Just Not to Feel Anything”: How Ukrainian Women Fixers Respond to the Embodied Work of War Reporting
“Sometimes It’s Easier Just Not to Feel Anything”: How Ukrainian Women Fixers Respond to the Embodied Work of War Reporting
Teodora Trifonova, Joy Jenkins
14. Juli 2026
en

Abstract

The study explores the trauma experiences and gendered labor of Ukrainian women working as local fixers for international major media outlets covering the Russian war. Using semi-structured interviews (N = 15) with Ukrainian women fixers and drawing on feminist standpoint epistemology and embodied journalism, this research investigates how they perceive and perform their roles in a male-dominated professional environment. Women fixers’ work is shaped by lived, embodied experiences and an alternative knowledge of conflict. The fixers have an unofficial leadership role in international news teams, describing themselves as producers who shape editorial decisions, ensure safety, and influence coverage. From a feminist standpoint, their experiences show how lived experiences afford them authority in war reporting, even when it is not formally recognized. However, they face gender inequalities, primarily from male foreign correspondents who question their competency, as well as from Ukrainian military personnel who undermine their expertise and authority. Women fixers have also received unwanted sexual propositions from other freelancers in the media teams. Participants acknowledged that they have been traumatized by the war coverage, and they do not receive sufficient institutional support, but they invest in self-funded coping strategies.

Keywords

sometimeseasierjustfeelanythingukrainianwomenfixersrespondembodiedworkreportingjournalismmediaexplorestraumaexperiencesgenderedlaborworkinglocalinternationalmajoroutlets
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