Framed by examples from Giguere's work with the Shakespeare & Violence Prevention program, an interdisciplinary outreach project for K-12 schools developed at the University of Colorado Boulder, the text offers helpful entry points, digestible research, and practical exercises to align a violence-prevention curriculum with Shakespeare's plays. It provides a condensed overview of key findings from violence prevention, clear synopses of the plays, and practicable strategies to implement the program. Guided by firsthand experience with a tried-and-true school program that reaches thousands of K-12 students annually, Giguere shares the Colorado Shakespeare Festival method, which focuses on "upstander" roleplays to practice violence-prevention strategies. Using a clear distillation of Shakespeare studies and violence-prevention research, she shows how the two fields naturally reinforce the concepts of teamwork, empathy, change, and hope.
Shakespeare and Violence Prevention is a new spin on these classic texts that empowers teachers and community leaders to use these tools to create research-guided university engagement programs, theatre company outreach programs, and K-12 student engagement with Shakespeare, even for those without expertise in violence prevention or Shakespeare.