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@00000373@Design as Future-Making@00000155@ brings together leading international designers, scholars, and critics to address ways in which design is shaping the future. The contributors share an understanding of design as a practice that, with its focus on innovation and newness, is a natural ally of futurity. Ultimately, the choices made by designers are understood here as choices about the kind of world we want to live in. Design as Future-Making locates design in a space of creative and critical reflection, examining the expanding nature of practice in fields such as biomedicine, sustainability, digital crafting, fashion, architecture, urbanism, and design activism. The authors contextualize design and its affects within issues of social justice, environmental health, political agency, education, and the right to pleasure and play. Collectively, they make the case that, as an integrated mode of thought and action, design is intrinsically social and deeply political.
List of contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword, Arjun Appadurai, New York University, USA
Introduction: Design as Future-Making, Susan Yelavich, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Section I. Crafting Capacities
Introduction, Barbara Adams, The New School for Social Research, USA
Thinking Differently about Life: Design, Biomedicine and "Negative Capability", Elio Caccavale, Glasgow School of Art, UK and Tom Shakespeare, University of East Anglia Medical School, UK
Unmapping, Sean Donahue, Research-Centered Design, USA
Fashion Hacking, Otto von Busch, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Digital Crafting and the Challenge to Material Practices, Mette Ramsgard Thomsen, Royal Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, Design and Conservation, Denmark
Petrified Curtains, Animate Architextiles, Susan Yelavich, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Section II. Shifting Geographies
Introduction, Susan Yelavich, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Urban Ecologies: Quatre systèmes de conception pour la fabrication de "la Cité", William Morrish, Parsons The New School of Design, USA
Architecture of Informality, Ivan Kucina, University of Belgrade, Serbia
The Trans/Local Geography of Olympic Dissent: Activism, Design, Affect, Jilly Traganou, Parsons The New School for Design, USA and Grace Vetrocq Tuttle, communication design specialist, USA
Garments as Agents of Change: Lucia Cuba, Hazel Clark, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Returning Duchamp's Urinal to the Bathroom? On the Reconnection of Artistic Experimentation, Social Responsibility and Institutional Transformation, Teddy Cruz, University of California, San Diego, USA
Sze Tsung Leong and Susan Yelavich Interview, Sze Tsung Leong, artist, USA Section III. Up-ending Systems
Introduction, Barbara Adams, The New School for Social Research, USA
Designing Time, Anna Barbara, Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy
Reasons to Be Cheerful, 1, 2, 3 . (Or Why the Artificial May Yet Save Us), Clive Dilnot, Parsons The New School for Design, USA
Design Away, Cameron Tonkinwise, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Pace Layers, Bruce Sterling, author, journalist, editor and critic, USA
Forms of Space and Time, Anna Barbara, Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy"When we understand that slide, we'll have won the war": Systemic Complexity and the Irregularities of Scale, Jamer Hunt, Parsons The New School, USA
Afterword: Tim Marshall, The New School, USA
Endnotes
Bibliography
Contributor Biographies
Report
In reading this book I thought that future-making is not building: it is weaving. Intertwining these essays, Susan Yelavich and Barbara Adams have been very skillful weavers. And, therefore, very effective future-makers. Ezio Manzini, Professor of Design at the Politecnico di Milano, Italy