This research article examines the role of visual media in shaping cultural identity within migrant communities in the context of increasing global mobility. It argues that visual communication, including photography, video production, and digital media, functions not only as a form of artistic expression but as a structural mechanism through which identity is reconstructed, negotiated, and maintained in transnational environments. The study develops a theoretical framework that conceptualizes visual media as a form of cultural infrastructure. Within this framework, visual communication is shown to support the circulation of collective memory, the stabilization of self-representation, and the mediation of social belonging across fragmented institutional and geographic contexts. Particular attention is given to the emergence of hybrid identities and the role of visual practices in connecting past, present, and projected forms of selfhood. The article further analyzes visual storytelling as a key mechanism of social integration. It demonstrates how narrative-based visual content enables migrants to participate in symbolic exchange, challenge simplified representations, and contribute to the reconfiguration of public discourse. Visual storytelling is presented as a process that transforms individual experience into shared narrative, facilitating recognition across cultural boundaries. Special emphasis is placed on the role of creative professionals working within migrant contexts. The study shows that photographers, videographers, and other visual practitioners act as mediators of meaning, producing narratives that shape both internal community cohesion and external perception. Their work contributes to the formation of collective legitimacy and to the development of new cultural forms emerging from migration. The version deposited in Zenodo is provided as a scholarly research article intended to support open academic access, citation, and further theoretical development. The content reflects the author’s original analytical contribution and is designed for use in interdisciplinary research on migration, media, and cultural identity.
Artur Sukhoiarskyi (Tue,) studied this question.
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