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Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

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Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being. / Brewster, Liz; Cox, Andrew.
Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion. ed. / Javier Saavedra; Alicia Espanol; Samuel Arias-Sanchez; Marina Calderon-Garcia. University of Seville, 2017. p. 83-94.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Brewster, L & Cox, A 2017, Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being. in J Saavedra, A Espanol, S Arias-Sanchez & M Calderon-Garcia (eds), Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion. University of Seville, pp. 83-94. <https://idus.us.es/xmlui/handle/11441/65469>

APA

Brewster, L., & Cox, A. (2017). Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being. In J. Saavedra, A. Espanol, S. Arias-Sanchez, & M. Calderon-Garcia (Eds.), Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion (pp. 83-94). University of Seville. https://idus.us.es/xmlui/handle/11441/65469

Vancouver

Brewster L, Cox A. Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being. In Saavedra J, Espanol A, Arias-Sanchez S, Calderon-Garcia M, editors, Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion. University of Seville. 2017. p. 83-94

Author

Brewster, Liz ; Cox, Andrew. / Take a photo a day and call me in the morning : Exploring photography projects and well-being. Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion. editor / Javier Saavedra ; Alicia Espanol ; Samuel Arias-Sanchez ; Marina Calderon-Garcia. University of Seville, 2017. pp. 83-94

Bibtex

@inproceedings{e46a99e4d7bc46528a7822a8c909845c,
title = "Take a photo a day and call me in the morning: Exploring photography projects and well-being",
abstract = "The practice of taking a photo every day and sharing it online has increased inpopularity across social media and image-sharing websites. This paper explores the potential well-being benefits of participating in this practice, examining the different social and creative ways in which participants use it.We interviewed sixteen people who currently participate in photo-a-day projects, and identified with the concept that participation in these projects had positive wellbeing benefits. Data were analysed using a grounded and iterative approach.Analysis focused on how participants derived well-being benefits in photo-a-dayprojects.Photo-a-day projects enabled participants to look differently at the world. There was something satisfying to participants about noticing the world around them more, perhaps giving a sense of being more alive because they were more aware. The negative impacts on well-being mainly centred around the rules and constraints of the projects, including feeling obliged to respond to comments. Nevertheless, photoa-day projects gave a sense of agency and choice, focused around a pleasant goal.Sharing photos could enhance social connections and lead to new relationships. The structure of taking one photo every day encouraged reminiscence, looking back on positive experiences and negative experiences overcome. ",
keywords = "photography, well-being, mental health",
author = "Liz Brewster and Andrew Cox",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
day = "15",
language = "English",
isbn = "9788469735824",
pages = "83--94",
editor = "Javier Saavedra and Alicia Espanol and Samuel Arias-Sanchez and Marina Calderon-Garcia",
booktitle = "Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion",
publisher = "University of Seville",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Take a photo a day and call me in the morning

T2 - Exploring photography projects and well-being

AU - Brewster, Liz

AU - Cox, Andrew

PY - 2017/9/15

Y1 - 2017/9/15

N2 - The practice of taking a photo every day and sharing it online has increased inpopularity across social media and image-sharing websites. This paper explores the potential well-being benefits of participating in this practice, examining the different social and creative ways in which participants use it.We interviewed sixteen people who currently participate in photo-a-day projects, and identified with the concept that participation in these projects had positive wellbeing benefits. Data were analysed using a grounded and iterative approach.Analysis focused on how participants derived well-being benefits in photo-a-dayprojects.Photo-a-day projects enabled participants to look differently at the world. There was something satisfying to participants about noticing the world around them more, perhaps giving a sense of being more alive because they were more aware. The negative impacts on well-being mainly centred around the rules and constraints of the projects, including feeling obliged to respond to comments. Nevertheless, photoa-day projects gave a sense of agency and choice, focused around a pleasant goal.Sharing photos could enhance social connections and lead to new relationships. The structure of taking one photo every day encouraged reminiscence, looking back on positive experiences and negative experiences overcome.

AB - The practice of taking a photo every day and sharing it online has increased inpopularity across social media and image-sharing websites. This paper explores the potential well-being benefits of participating in this practice, examining the different social and creative ways in which participants use it.We interviewed sixteen people who currently participate in photo-a-day projects, and identified with the concept that participation in these projects had positive wellbeing benefits. Data were analysed using a grounded and iterative approach.Analysis focused on how participants derived well-being benefits in photo-a-dayprojects.Photo-a-day projects enabled participants to look differently at the world. There was something satisfying to participants about noticing the world around them more, perhaps giving a sense of being more alive because they were more aware. The negative impacts on well-being mainly centred around the rules and constraints of the projects, including feeling obliged to respond to comments. Nevertheless, photoa-day projects gave a sense of agency and choice, focused around a pleasant goal.Sharing photos could enhance social connections and lead to new relationships. The structure of taking one photo every day encouraged reminiscence, looking back on positive experiences and negative experiences overcome.

KW - photography

KW - well-being

KW - mental health

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 9788469735824

SP - 83

EP - 94

BT - Creative Practices for Improving Health and Social Inclusion

A2 - Saavedra, Javier

A2 - Espanol, Alicia

A2 - Arias-Sanchez, Samuel

A2 - Calderon-Garcia, Marina

PB - University of Seville

ER -