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Embodied Embroidery: Somaesthetic Interaction Design for Women's Masturbation

Dianya Mia Hua, Jeffrey Bardzell, Shaowen Bardzell

202327 citationsDOI

Abstract

Though a taboo topic, women's masturbation is the most effective technique in producing orgasms among all sexual behaviors [37]. This project explores how somaesthetic interaction design can contribute to designing for women's sexual pleasure, challenging androcentric discourses on women's sexuality, and also the desexualization of women with dis/abilities. In the study, the first author, who identifies as a woman with an invisible disability, experiments with other women's masturbatory techniques using her own body as a design resource. She then articulated that intersubjective engagement using her own body as an artistic medium in the form of Embodied Embroidery, a practice inspired by women's artmaking, and which seeks to foreground the aesthetic dimensions of experiential knowledge to support theory-making in design. Guided by three key features of somaesthetic interaction—first-person perspective, intersubjectivity, and articulation—this pictorial contributes to pleasure activism in the domain of HCI and interaction design.

Topics & Concepts

Embodied cognitionPleasureTabooIntersubjectivityArticulation (sociology)AestheticsHuman sexualityPsychologyConnotationPerspective (graphical)SociologyInclusion (mineral)Experiential learningSocial psychologyGender studiesComputer scienceArtLinguisticsArtificial intelligencePsychotherapistPedagogyPhilosophyPolitical scienceLawAnthropologySocial sciencePoliticsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionPersona Design and ApplicationsDigital Games and Media
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