Litcius/Paper detail

Crip Reflections on Designing with Plants: Intersecting Disability Theory, Chronic Illness, and More-than-Human Design✱

Sylvia Janicki, Nassim Parvin, Noura Howell

2024Designing Interactive Systems Conference26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Through an autoethnographic account of designing, exhibiting, and maintaining an interactive bioart installation with plants, we trace intersections between more-than-human design, disability theory, and lived experiences of chronic illness. Specifically, we deconstruct three "polished" exhibits of our installation through stories of breakdowns and failures, organized in three main themes: maintenance and care, buggy biodata, and collective resistance to purification and control. Our reflections show how plants, technologies, and a chronically ill body became entangled with each other conceptually and materially, surfacing new sites for more-than-human relationalities. In our discussion, we unpack how disability perspectives can expand more-than-human design practices, highlight opportunities for re-imagining exhibition spaces, and offer adaptation as a strategy for design in HCI.

Topics & Concepts

TRACE (psycholinguistics)ExhibitionResistance (ecology)Adaptation (eye)SociologyDisability studiesComputer scienceEngineeringPsychologyEcologyVisual artsGender studiesBiologyNeurosciencePhilosophyLinguisticsArtInnovative Human-Technology InteractionPersona Design and ApplicationsDesign Education and Practice