Litcius/Paper detail

Making space for material entanglements: A diffractive analysis of woodwork and the practice of making an interactive system

Charlotte Nordmoen, Andrew McPherson

2022Designing Interactive Systems Conference30 citationsDOI

Abstract

A shift in perspective is underway in design research and human-computer interaction (HCI) from humans as the centre of attention to considering complex assemblages of human and non-human stakeholders. While this shift is often approached from a broad ecological level, there is opportunity for a more local shift in understanding our day to day meeting with the material world. Drawing on the posthuman theories of Karen Barad, we explore the creation of a digital interactive system as a material-discursive practice in which matter and culture are inseparably entangled. We seek a fresh look at the process rather than the outcome of interactive system design through a diffractive reading of four traditional woodworking practices and an auto-ethnographic account of the development of a digital sensor and actuator apparatus as a way to find alternative ways of attending to materials in HCI.

Topics & Concepts

PosthumanPerspective (graphical)Reading (process)Computer scienceEthnographyHuman–computer interactionSociologySpace (punctuation)PosthumanismProcess (computing)Engineering ethicsEngineeringArtificial intelligenceAnthropologyLawPolitical scienceOperating systemInnovative Human-Technology InteractionCrafts, Textile, and DesignInformation Systems Theories and Implementation