Bri Lee


Brianna “Bri” Lee is an Australian writer, editor and women's rights activist based in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She is best known for her 2018 memoir Eggshell Skull that describes her experience as a complainant in the Australian court system for sexual abuse as a child by a family friend. Lee is the founder and editor of quarterly periodical Hot Chicks with Big Brains and has made frequent appearances on the Australian literary circuit including the Brisbane Writers Festival and Melbourne Writers Festival. Lee spent a year as a judge's associate for the District Court of Queensland and is qualified to practise law but chooses not to.

Career

Lee studied Law at the University of Queensland. In 2015 Lee was a judge's associate in Brisbane, Queensland. During her year in the position, she assisted her judge with court proceedings and made notes during trials at the Brisbane court house, and on circuit to rural areas of Queensland.

''Eggshell Skull''

Her book Eggshell Skull was published by Allen and Unwin in early 2018. The memoir spans three years from her first case as an associate and the two-year process of having her own complaint filed through the Australian justice system. Lee recounts the trauma of being sexually assaulted as a child by her brother's friend on the trampoline in her backyard. Lee did not admit that she was a victim of abuse until adulthood. The book contains numerous examples of sexism and a bias against women in complaints of sexual assault and harassment, with the majority of cases ending in a not guilty verdict despite truthful witness testimonies. In the book, Lee cites her first example of a historic abuse case with a male complainant as the reason she decided to make an official report to the police for her own assault. “He’d used the world ‘lighter’. I wanted ‘lighter’. I wanted to be able to let it go, to move on.” Although Lee's assaulter admitted the offence on a recorded pretext phone call, the trial was continuously delayed for two years. Speaking at the University of Queensland Lee stated that she was concerned that any further delay would coincide with the publisher's deadline for Eggshell Skull, which she was writing contemporaneously to the case. In December 2017, the prosecution succeeded in winning the case on two counts of indecent treatment of a child. The sentence was subsequently appealed, however, the judgment on appeal has not been made publicly available.
The book's title is derived from the legal doctrine eggshell skull that states the court must take the victim as they find them. If Person A struck Person B on the head meaning only to punch but instead fatally wounded them because Person B's skull is as thin and fragile as an eggshell, Person A is responsible for the damage that they have caused. Lee's title subverts this maxim; the court takes her as a victim who is determined for justice and understands her rights within the complexities of the law.
The portrayal of Lee in public appearances and interviews can be separated into two distinct categories: Bri Lee the sexual assault survivor, and Bri Lee the writer. In an interview with Australian network ABC about the #MeToo movement, Lee was questioned on why she wrote the book and not the process of how she wrote it. She spoke about the other women that were assaulted, hoping that she would inspire them to speak out also. Lee's writing has also been discussed in a literary capacity. One example of this is Sydney-based Newtown Review of Books, who focus on the symbolism of the Hills Hoist throughout the text and praise Lee's unique and fresh perspective in her narrative voice.

Other work

In 2015 Lee founded and edited Hot Chicks with Big Brains, to promote diverse non-fiction writing from working women. After seven quarterly issues, it is now defunct.
Lee's second book, Beauty, a collection of essays about body image and perfectionism, was published by Allen & Unwin in October 2019.
In 2020 Lee was appointed the Australian Copyright Agency's Writer-in-Residence at the University of Technology Sydney.

Awards

YearAward Received
2016Ray Koppe Young Writer's Residency
2016Inaugural Kat Muscat Fellowship
2016Ubud Writers Festival Exchange Program Scholarship
2017Virgin Australia Melbourne Fashion Festival writing mentorship
2017Griffith Review Queensland Writer's Fellowship
2017Jacky Winter Gardens residency
2018Commonwealth Government scholarship and stipend for an MPhil in Creative Writing at the University of Queensland
2018Lord Mayor's Young and Emerging Artist's Fellowship
2019People's Choice Award, Victorian Premier's Literary Awards for Eggshell Skull
2019Biography Book of the Year, Australian Book Industry Awards for Eggshell Skull
2019The Australian Financial Review's 100 Women of Influence — Young Leader