Children’s art as visual narrative

This article about visual narrative highlights the effectiveness of non-verbal expressive arts like drawing, painting, and constructing as therapeutic and restorative experiences. Trauma survivors, including children, may find it challenging to articulate their experiences verbally, as trauma can impact the brain’s language centers. The article contrasts previous approaches that encouraged forgetting traumatic events with the current understanding of the importance of acknowledging, validating, and providing mental health intervention for survivors, allowing them to tell their stories through creative acts. The article references the project “Forced to Flee: Visual Stories of Refugee Youth from Burma,” which compiles a book of art expressions by young refugees (a page for the kickstarter campaign for the project was available as of 12/20/23 at this link). The project showcases how visual narratives, conveyed through art, can tell powerful stories, open hearts, and build bridges of understanding. By honoring the visual narratives of youth, the project not only raises awareness about human rights issues but also offers a glimpse into possibilities for reparation and redemption for young survivors.

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