This Website Is An Archive, As Of October 2024.

The Engagement Lab at Emerson College has closed its doors. Read the report detailing the ELab’s final chapter, read testimonials from our extended community, or dismiss this message to explore the archive.




Peace Play in Virtual Reality

A person in a pink sweater wearing a VR headset and facemask

About

Peace Play in Virtual Reality is a VR application co-created by Emerson College students alongside members of the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute's survivors network. It is inspired by the LDBPI's Peace Play in Urban Settings healing modality, which invites participants to create a concrete world to express the feelings and emotions they may not have language for by creating scenes using miniature figures in a tray of sand.

Peace Play in Virtual Reality immerses users in a virtual beachscape, from which they can interact with symbolic objects of special meaning to Janice McCoy, whose son was murdered in 2018, while learning about her healing journey with the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute.

The application is still in development, and will be available for download when it is complete.




A Look Inside the Co-Creation Process

Two students, one looking at the camera and one working

“Since our project is about, and for the community we are working with, their feedback is invaluable to our work. I think any and all of the feedback they gave for all different aspects of the project should be used to reconsider and revise it and make this the best version we can make it.”

Tamara Hamdalla, Student

Social Impact Studios, facilitated by the Engagement Lab, give Emerson students and faculty the opportunity to work directly with local grassroots changemakers to co-create media projects that will make an impact in Boston and beyond.

Peace Play in Virtual Reality was co-created in Fall 2022’s Social Impact Studio in immersive media, in partnership with the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute.

Partners




Project Team