Abstract

Recent reviews of therapeutic photography have identi¢ed the technique’s unique ability to transcend culture and language, both essential characteristics of international trauma therapy. This article describes a process, through which youth identi¢ed changes in self-perception after a photojournalism workshop, using an interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) approach and conducted in a Shan migrant community centre in northern Thailand. The authors (a) provide a broad overview of a form of therapeutic photography utilised within a humanitarian aid context, (b) examine the concept of posttraumatic growth (PTG) within a traumatised adolescent population on the Thai/Burma border and, (c) suggest the potential for a new domain of growth as it relates to the application of Tedeshi & Calhoun’s conceptual foundation of PTG (1995), within a Southeast Asian context. Results suggest that perceptions of self, and one’s role in the community, did improve within the context of this project. A discussion of the limits and merits of this approach is also presented.

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