Performing the Peace: Honor & Heal, a four-day artistic residency focused on justice, healing and advocacy, culminated on March 13 with a community-building performance of an original choreopoem that explores what it means to “honor and heal” through storytelling, movement, and poetry. The workshop, led by Lecturer in Theater Chesney Snow, brought together the unlikely collaborators of Princeton students, justice-impacted youth, law enforcement officers and U.S. military veterans to build a team of advocates for future arts-based healing experiences.
Earlier this fall at Princeton, Snow won first place in the Humanities and Social Sciences category at the Keller Center’s 2024 Innovation Forum for his broader research project, Performing the Peace, that aims to enrich law enforcement training to foster empathy and build community trust through the arts.
The event was supported by Princeton University’s Program for Community Engaged Scholarship (ProCES), the Keller Center, and the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Theater & Music Theater.




