Multimedia Storytelling

An Approach for Processing Collective Trauma and Healing with Marginalized Youth

Authors

  • Jennifer Ventimiglia University of Illinois Urbana Champaign

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70085/jtse.v4i2.132

Keywords:

Healing Centered Engagement, Collective Trauma, Multimedia Storytelling, Counter-Narrative

Abstract

This pilot study examines (1) the role shared experiences play in building mutual trust and respect in a mentor/mentee relationship between violence intervention workers and gang-involved youth, and (2) the impact digital media storytelling has on gang-involved youth’s ability to process trauma and heal. One salient narrative emerging from the research is the mentor’s use of shared stories to both validate and challenge gang-involved youth’s thinking. The research also found cross-cutting themes from different youth produced digital media mediums including inner demons, death of innocents, and personal sacrifice. Despite coming from different gangs, neighborhoods, races, and ethnicities, many gang-involved youth describe a common code of ethics to process their shared experiences with collective trauma and violence, and ultimately, heal.

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Published

10/28/2025

How to Cite

Ventimiglia, J. (2025). Multimedia Storytelling: An Approach for Processing Collective Trauma and Healing with Marginalized Youth. Journal of Trauma Studies in Education, 4(2), 82–101. https://doi.org/10.70085/jtse.v4i2.132

Issue

Section

Research Articles

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