2014
DOI: 10.1080/1472586x.2014.862990
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Exploring the ‘craftedness’ of multimedia narratives: from creation to interpretation

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Cited by 16 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The materiality of an image has profound consequences for how it is interpreted (Gubrium & Harper, 2013;Mitchell, 2011). Yet the crafted nature of visuals is rarely explored in detail in visual methods literature (Brushwood Rose & Low, 2014). Furthermore, while community exhibits in photovoice are common, rarely do scholars describe whether or how participants are involved in exhibit development (Evans-Agnew & Rosemberg, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The materiality of an image has profound consequences for how it is interpreted (Gubrium & Harper, 2013;Mitchell, 2011). Yet the crafted nature of visuals is rarely explored in detail in visual methods literature (Brushwood Rose & Low, 2014). Furthermore, while community exhibits in photovoice are common, rarely do scholars describe whether or how participants are involved in exhibit development (Evans-Agnew & Rosemberg, 2016).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Visual methods are also linked to other creative and aesthetic forms of self-expression, holding emancipatory power that helps the narrator find her voice and identity (Bragg, 2011;Brushwood Rose & Low, 2014). Lorenz (2010) defines visual artifacts as metaphors that bring alive emotions and personal experiences and help children share and reflect upon their sense-making.…”
Section: Visual Participatory Research Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other writers have also extended the terrain initially explored by Lambert to include the use of Digital Storytelling as vernacular creativity (Burgess, 2006), as a method for qualitative research into particular policy issues (Gubrium, 2009), as a form of personal creativity, a means to preserve a community's identity, as a form of oral history (Klaebe, Foth, Burgess & Bilandzic, 2007, p.33). Brushwood and Low (2014) consider DS a program aimed at "empowering participants through processes of representation, affirming their capacity to communicate their experiences to others and asserting the socio-political significance of doing so". The ways digital stories are re-defined and re-used goes beyond the initial meaning -of merely giving a voice to the voiceless, by allowing them to tell their view of life events in a format including technology.…”
Section: Digital Storytelling -Use and Practicementioning
confidence: 99%