Interaction Design WikiInterdisciplinary Modules

Reboot Design Technology 2021

Block Seminar Design Theory 5th semester

Lecturer:
Dr. Joëlle Bitton

The module takes place over 1 week, from 6.9.21 to 10.9.21, from Monday to Friday, 9.00-17.00 in room 5H02 & online.

Topic

Design and Technology share a similar destiny: imbued with the roles of solving problems, characterised by an expectation that they can change any situation for the better.
But what if this is an illusion?

With the society at large becoming more aware of issues related to top-down decisions and techno-centric solutions such as large-scale surveillance, ecological dooms and oppression of civic rights, we have the responsibility and the opportunity to rethink the place of design and technology.
What if we should reboot our mindset for design methods and technological tools to become truly inclusive?

Objectives of the course

The aim of the seminar is to reflect on the roles we attribute to design and technology currently, how it was set in pop culture narratives and how we could ‘reboot’ the disciplines in education to include urgent societal questions. The seminar is structured as a dialogue and the students will work on certain questions themselves. In the end, a one-page website should be created to showcase a proposal. 

In this course, we will look at a range of aspects:

Structure

The class will be structured around discussions, lectures, presentations of film and literature materials and in-class exercises.

Deliverables

Expectations and Gradings

Grades will be based on exercises, class participation and final work. 
Contributing to constructive group feedback is an essential aspect of class participation. 
Regular attendance of 80% is required. Arriving late on more than one occasion will also affect the grade.

Final work 50% 

Exercises/reading assignments 30% 

Class participation 20% 

Any assignment that remains unfulfilled receives a failing grade.  

Timetable

Mon 6.09 -
Past <> Imagineers
Tu 7.09 -
Future <> Futurisms

We 8.09 -
Present <> Reboot

Th 9.09 -
(...)

Fr 10.09 -
Where to?

9.00

  • Intro: syllabus & course overview
  • Writing / reflective session

  • Lecture:
    'Iron Men 3D'
     

9.00

  • Through a series of films, music videos and experimental projects, we'll time travel


9.00

  • Readings discussion
  • Overview of proposals and case studies that open up or close up the design field.
All day:
Independent study - Prepare final assignment

Morning:
Independent study - Prepare final assignment

Afternoon:
Independent study - Prepare assignment


Afternoon:
Independent study - Prepare assignment

15.00 Guest Lecture:

  • Tiara Roxanne, indigenous artist working with AI


13.30

  • Presentation of final assignments
  • Closing Discussion
5.H025.H02Online
Online


Literature/References


Guest Lecture by Tiara Roxanne 

Tiara Roxanne (PhD) is an Indigenous cyberfeminist, scholar and artist based in Berlin. Her research and artistic practice investigates the encounter between the Indigenous Body and AI by interrogating colonial structures embedded within machine learning systems.  Her work more specifically explores the notion that decolonization is not possible and therefore we must  establish decolonial gestures, a concept she has been developing from the start of her dissertation,  "Recovering Indigeneity: Territorial Dehiscence and Digital Immanence," which was completed in June of 2019 under the supervision of Catherine Malabou. In this way, decolonial gestures stand in as forces and modes of decolonial or anti-colonial embodied actions.  Moreover, as a performance artist and practitioner, she works between the digital and the material using textile. Currently her work is mediated through the color red. Tiara has presented her work at Images Festival (Toronto), Squeaky Wheel Film and Media Art Center (NY), Trinity Square Video (Toronto), SOAS (London), SLU (Madrid), Transmediale (Berlin), Duke University (NC), re:publica (Berlin), Tech Open Air (Berlin), AMOQA (Athens), among others. 

https://www.academia.edu/40442089/DIGITAL_TERRITORY_DIGITAL_FLESH_DECODING_THE_INDIGENOUS_BODY
https://www.academia.edu/42641770/Data_Colonialism_Decolonial_Gestures_of_Storytelling
https://www.academia.edu/44926818/Re_Präsentation_verweigern