If/Only: design, technology and society 2020 
INTERACTION DESIGN THEORY SEMINAR 4th semester

Spring 2020

INSTRUCTORS

Stefano Vannotti

Verena Ziegler, verena.ziegler@zhdk.ch 

Dr Joëlle Bitton, joelle.bitton@zhdk.ch 


Office hours by appointment 


Class sessions include a lecture/discussion each Monday from 13.00-15.00 ZT in 4.K16 (last day in 6.F01).

OVERVIEW AND OBJECTIVES 

The seminar proposes a critical examination of political components of design as it articulates technology and society. 
Design is often understood on the surface as an activity producing more or less useful or ornamental things - outside the scope of its entanglements with questions of policy, trade, labor, gender, resources, power structures. Yet, designers can hold an agenda in these matters and designed artefacts and systems can affect how people live, communicate and act. This seminar thus proposes to uncover the material dimension of politics. Through case studies, observations of situations, film excerpts, exercises, guest lectures and essays, we will look at those entanglements as well as address systems that may not seem 'designed' as such but that present components of being planned and organised for a particular purpose. 

The 12 sessions of the seminar are structured around 3 sections: 

  1. Spaces, Artefacts and Politics held by Verena Ziegler
  2. Complex Systems & Power Structures held by Dr Joëlle Bitton

  3. xx by Stefano Vannotti

EXPECTATIONS AND GRADING

The seminar proposes a critical conversation, addressing political components of design and their influence on human life. Methods of discussion, observation and critical thinking are practiced throughout.
Grades will be based on the oral and written presentations and on class participation. Contributing to constructive group feedback is an essential aspect of class participation. Regular attendance is required. Two or more unexcused absences will affect the final grade. Arriving late on more than one occasion will also affect the grade.

Class participation 20% 

In-class assignments 30%

Final Essay 50%

Any assignment that remains unfulfilled receives a failing grade. 


ESSAY

The final assignment should develop a question from the topics dealt with and include these in form of a critical or argumentative essay.

Extent of the essay about 2500 words with references and bibliography.

The essay can be written in German or English. 

Essay deadline: uploaded to the IAD server on XX date.


COURSE MATERIALS 

Readings are made available in the shared IAD server.

CALENDAR & SESSIONS

Session 01 – 02.03. Spaces and Politics  

Introduction of course outline 

Reyner Banham Loves Los Angeles, BBC 1972, http://vimeo.com/22488225.

William H. Whyte, The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces,  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_-nBr2MuBk.

Questions to answer in preparation to the seminar:

Try to map out (or highlight in the text) the Essays trajectory opinions and characteristics.


Session 02 - 09.03. Spaces 

Presentations of practical exercises

Didier Faustino, https://didierfaustino.com

Readings to be read in advance, preparation of presentations of observations and preparation of notes.


Session 3 - 16.03. Artifacts and Politics 

Readings to be read in advance and preparation of notes.


Session 04 – 23.03 Decolonising technologies

Readings to be read in advance and preparation of notes to be sent by Monday morning


Session 05 – 06.04 Accelerationism

Readings to be read in advance and preparation of notes to be sent by Monday morning

Session 06 – 06.05 - The Design of Trade

Commodities & entanglement

Cassandra Mark-Thiesen, “Labour Recruitment in the Nineteenth Century: The Place of Practicality” (Ch. 2). In Mediators, Contract Men, and Colonial Capital: Mechanized Gold Mining in the Gold Coast Colony, 1879-1909, University of Rochester Press, 2018.

Giorgi Riello, "The Globalization of cotton textiles. Indian Cottons, Europe, and the Atlantic World, 1600–1850". In Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio Riello, eds, The Spinning World: A Global History of Cotton Textiles, 1200-1850 (Oxford, 2009).

You, Mi. (2018). Silk Roads, Tributary Networks and Old and New Imperialism. Extra States: Nations in Liquidation. C. Edwards and i. Fokianaki. Antwerp, Kunsthal Extra City. 

Session 07 

Session 08

Session 09

Session 10

Session 11

Session 12