Block Seminar Block Seminar Design Theory 3rd semester
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As we rediscover materialities in a digital world, we are confronted with a growing need to understand how things are made, where they come from, which knowledge, legacies, and traditions are embedded in them, and how those things are transported, discarded, and recycled by whom, and where, etc. These questions tie with a general concern for environmental impacts of consumerism and waste, and the human rights entangled with them. The very finite materials that are being mined in remote locations by exploited labor demonstrate the extension to which extractivism damages local ecosystems and cultural heritage.
These notions of material flows through geography, history, trade agreements, mining of indigenous resources, migrations are now crucial to grasp for a study of making, craft and fabrication.
Objectives of the course
This seminar aims to tie the larger socio-economic context of material sourcing and transformation together with practices of fabrication.
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- Assignment 0 (before Monday 9.9)
- Read
- Jan Zalasiewicz, . 2010. Chapter 1. "Stardust", In The Planet in a Pebble, A Journey into Earth's Deep History. Oxford University Press.
- Jan Zalasiewicz, . 2010. Chapter 1. "Stardust", In The Planet in a Pebble, A Journey into Earth's Deep History. Oxford University Press.
- Read
- Assignments 1 (prepare on Monday 9.9 afternoon) - send reading notes by email on& post material research on Miro Board on 9.9 by 19.00
- Read
- Robin Wall Kimmerer, . 2018. "MishkosKenomagwen, the Lessons of Grass: Restoring Reciprocity with the Good Green Earth”.Earth”. In Nelson & Shilling (eds), The Traditional Ecological Knowledge. Learning from Indigenous Practices for Environmental Sustainability. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
The remarks should capture learning points and possible critiques of the papers. - Investigation of materials from Switzerland or emblematic of Swiss market
Pick 1 material and conduct a research to find out: where that material comes from, how it has been extracted & by whom, how it is transformed & where, its lifecycle, its history & importance for local population and distant users, its trade, its legislation, its raw price value, and its price value on mainstream market, the companies involved in the supply chain, its availability (or rarity), its uses (or un-uses), and its environmental impact. Post research findings on Miro Board. Bring a sample in class for presenting some of the findings. (Examples: chocolate, mineral water, gold, cement, banking, agriculture...)
- Read
- Assignments 2 (prepare on Tuesday 10.9 afternoon) - send notes by email on 10.9 by 19.00
- Read
- Giorgi Riello, . 2009. "The Globalization of cotton textiles. Indian Indian Cottons, Europe, and the Atlantic World, 1600–1850". , 1600–1850". In Parthasarathi & Riello (eds), The Spinning World: A Global History of Cotton Textiles, 1200-1850. Oxford University Press.
- G. Dobler & Kesselring R. 2019. "Swiss extractivism: Switzerland’s role in Zambia’s copper sector". In Journal of Modern African Studies, 57, 2. pp. 223-245. Cambridge University Press.
The remarks should capture learning points and possible critiques of the papers. - Find 1-2 projects that show how the design & art fields can address those issues and propose alternatives (you will present 1 or 2 of them in class with 1 - 2 sentences each). Post link, author(s), title, date, picture, comment on Miro board.
- Read
- Assignment 3 (prepare on Wednesday 11.9) - send notes by email on 11.09 by 2021.00
- Read
- Damian White,
Victor Crochet, . 2022. "Trade Defence Instruments: A New Tool for the European Union’s Extractivism".
for the European Union’s Extractivism". In European Journal of International Law, 33, 2. pp381-410. Oxford University Press.
- .
Damian White. 2019. "Just Transitions/Design for Transitions
: Preliminary Notes on a Design Politics for a Green New Deal". In Capitalism Nature Socialism. Routledge.
The remarks should capture learning points and possible critiques of the papers.Write 2-3 paragraphs about your impressions on the for each paper, remarks (what concept is new to you, inspiring aspects, positions you disagree with, etc..), questions...
- Read
- Assignment 4 - Final Work: The format of the final outcome is decided by each student- it will be an online representation of your approach of the topic (possibly 1-page website, written essay, video, or use of hosting platform such as TikTok, filmed performance, games, new object...). Individual work (some works can be in connection with one another). Your work needs to be in adequacy with the intention and the process. The collection of works from each student will constitute together an online exhibition.
- +500 words to give context to the piece.
- 3-5 mn presentation : why you made it, how it relates to the topic
- the ideas could represent your position on a topic above or on a case study discussed in class, your new proposal, or your interpretation of an issue
- who is your desired audience and how do you reach it?
- Final presentation in class - upload on platform on 13.9 by 1113.3000 & present in class concisely. Send me as well a hard copy via email / wetransfer by 11.30.
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Mon 9.09 - Past <> Trade | Tu 10.09 - Future <> Geologies | We 11.09 - | Th 12.09 - Present <> Sufficiency | Fr 13.09 - | |||
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9.00 - 13.00
| 9.00 - 12.30
| 9.00 - 12.00
| 9Independent study -
| Morning: 10.00 - | 1011. | 0030
| Morning: |
Afternoon: Independent study - Prepare assignments 1 | Afternoon:
| 14.00
| 13.30 - 17.00
| ||||
Zoom | In-class | Zoom (morning) - City tour (afternoon) | City location (morning) In-class (afternoon) |
Literature/References - Recap:
- To prepare before class starts (optional):
- Jan Zalasiewicz ,
- . 2010. Chapter 1. "Stardust", In The Planet in a Pebble, A Journey into Earth's Deep History. Oxford University Press , 2010
- .
- To read Monday 9.09:
- Robin Wall Kimmerer, . 2018. "MishkosKenomagwen, the Lessons of Grass: Restoring Reciprocity with the Good Green Earth”.Earth”. In Nelson & Shilling (eds), The Traditional Ecological Knowledge. Learning from Indigenous Practices for Environmental Sustainability. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
- Robin Wall Kimmerer, . 2018. "MishkosKenomagwen, the Lessons of Grass: Restoring Reciprocity with the Good Green Earth”.Earth”. In Nelson & Shilling (eds), The Traditional Ecological Knowledge. Learning from Indigenous Practices for Environmental Sustainability. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
- To read Tuesday 10.09:
- Giorgi Riello, . 2009. "The Globalization of cotton textiles. Indian Indian Cottons, Europe, and the Atlantic World, 1600–1850". In Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio & Riello , (eds), The Spinning World: A Global Global History of Cotton Textiles, 1200-1850. Oxford University Press, 2009.
- G. Dobler & Kesselring R. 2019. "Swiss extractivism: Switzerland’s role in Zambia’s copper sector". The
- In Journal of Modern African Studies . 2019;
- , 57 (2):
- , 2. pp. 223-245. Cambridge University Press.
- To read Wednesday 11.09 :
- Victor Crochet, . 2022. "Trade Defence Instruments: A New Tool for the European Union’s Extractivism". In In European Journal of International Law, 33, 2. pp381-410. Oxford University Press, 2022.
- Damian White, . 2019. "Just Transitions/Design for Transitions. : Preliminary Notes on a Design Politics for a Green New Deal". In Capitalism Nature Socialism, 2019. Routledge.
- Additional optional readings:
- Graham Burnett,. 2008. Permaculture: A Beginners Guide. Spiralseed, 2008.
Matthieu Saujot, "A social . 2022. "What social contract for a finite world?". In IDDRI, Issue Brief N°03/22. 2022.
Reminder: For each paper, you need to send response notes: underline 2-3 points that sparked questions and possibly points that you felt should have been addressed in the paper or that you want to challenge.
Use the Reading guideline to comment on the texts.