Our Survivor-Centred Visual Narratives project honours the integrity of survivor voices from a wide range of genocides and mass atrocities in the global past and present.
While each survivor voice is unique, the visual narratives created through the Survivor-Centred Visual Narratives project share a united message: that genocide and mass atrocities are to be unequivocally condemned, wherever and whenever they occur. Our network of diverse teams spans varied genocide contexts, remembrance communities and cultural contexts around the world, but they all have a shared commitment to arts-based, trauma-informed and survivor-centred research. Collectively, our work highlights similarities and interconnections between experiences, while also recognising contextual differences and nuances that are important for honouring the full complexity of genocide history, experience and memory. SCVN fosters dialogue across different memory communities, underscoring that honouring one atrocity does not diminish acknowledgment of another, but instead deepens our collective understanding of cultural erasure, resilience, and the shared imperative to remember.
Our Survivor-Centred Visual Narratives project honours the integrity of survivor voices from a wide range of genocides and mass atrocities in the global past and present.
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