founded by spark
funded by passion
furthered by mission
PRO˚LOGUE

Mission


The DAI˚ALOGUE is a conscious storytelling platform founded by designer and photographer Emma Dai in 2020 and brought to life in its current form in 2024.

What is “conscious storytelling”, you ask?1 Put briefly, it’s telling stories with intention and championing an awareness of our communication style and editorial choices. It’s understanding how narratives are shaped by a multitude of factors—race, class, education, experience, relationships, politics, etcetera; acknowledging the impact that these narratives have on their subject matter and a wider audience; and crafting narratives responsibly to represent people and events in an authentic way. It’s a rejection of attention grabs, clickbait and all the other contemporary media and marketing techniques that have exploded in recent years to encourage blind and mindless consumption while deepening our distrust and intolerance of views and communities we don’t ascribe to.2

That’s not to say there’s no value in meme culture: it’s become an important and necessary part of how we connect with each other in the age of technology, and also a salve for an otherwise dark and difficult world. Rather, the concept of “conscious storytelling” describes the overarching recognition of an appropriate time, place and purpose for content. It’s an ability to critically analyse and consider the context of information. It’s thinking before acting and treating perspective and knowledge as evolving situations rather than absolute truths.

The DAI˚ALOGUE aims to use conscious storytelling to engage people in discussions around current issues, dedicating a portion of profits generated from its activities to the support of marginalised or at-risk communities. Its mission is to make progress towards a fairer, more equitable world, through a range of creative content, programmes, projects and events. In time I’d like to invite the possibility of contributors and partnerships to amplify its reach and impact, while retaining a steadfast commitment to real connection and sustainable practices—it is a brand insofar as it carries a logo and merchandise, but ultimately it honours my interests and dreams and it would be dishonest of me to pretend otherwise. I’m the one foraging for ideas and developing them into their final forms here; I’m behind the screen, the camera and most other apparatus; I’m fielding the interactions and handling anything harmful that lands in these digital spaces. What happens here will keep me up at night but will also keep me going. So hopefully, somewhere along the way, my work will mean something to you, and a few others.

Yours,

Emma Dai
Founder & DAI˚RECTOR

Founder photo credit: self-portrait shot at Candid Studios, November 2024


  1. For fear of being mistaken as an invocation of Goop.
  2. At the time of writing, the plural pronoun “we” is very much my observation projected onto the global community. It is based on opinion more than fact.
PRO˚LOGUE

Vision





founded by

spark

Everything begins with an idea; a purpose or point of motivation that sets the wheels in motion



funded by

passion

Production is catalysed by active interest and dedication to process; a belief in the value of the work over its profit potential



furthered by

mission

We are driven to do better for ourselves, each other, our planet and beyond—that is what inspires us to continue


PRO˚LOGUE

Values




EarthThe Earth is our shared home and we have a collective responsibility to preserve and protect it


EthicsA commitment to honesty, transparency and fair, compassionate presentation and judgement 


CultureCelebrating the complexity and diversity of lifestyles, identities and communities


CraftTaking pride in one’s work and the human capacity for creativity, innovation and diligence



ConnectionA fundamental belief that we are for each other1, and that no person is an island².

  1. A line from “since feeling is first”, a poem by E. E. Cummings. Published in the collection Is 5 in 1926. Read more about the significance of this poem in The DAI˚ALOGUE Anthology №1: Departures.
  2. A line from Devotions upon Emergent Occasions by John Donne. Published in 1624.
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