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Backyard Practices: A Liminal Approach to Designing in More-than-Human Worlds

Ron Wakkary, Doenja Oogjes, Oscar Tomico, Nazmus Sakib, Ege Kökel

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Abstract

As design researchers committed to more-than-human designing, we found we were increasingly moving our research activities outside of our institutional studios and labs into yards and balconies where we lived. In this paper, we investigate this emerging pattern through collaborative autoethnography to arrive at the notion of backyard practices. These are distinct practices that signal the value and necessity of being there in more-than-human worlds to design-with over time. We describe the features of the practice that include time as duration and intensities, liminality as more-than-human presences, and proximity. We also describe commitments that emerged that include practice decentering, consistently engage more-than-humans as participants in the process, act with not-knowing and humility, queerly design alongside, and learn to be affected.

Topics & Concepts

LiminalityComputer scienceSociologyAnthropologyInnovative Human-Technology InteractionInnovative Approaches in Technology and Social DevelopmentTechnology Use by Older Adults
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