Abstract
With increasingly complex technologies entering the daily lives of people, human-technology relations haves become more difficult to observe and make sense of. In this paper we discuss experiments with designing ‘Theory Instruments’ that allow designers to collaboratively play with multiple theoretical perspectives on field research material. We argue that the physical, tangible nature of these instruments helps to convey and experience the richness of theoretical frameworks and can make designers and researchers aware of easily overlooked aspects in ethnographic observations. We unfold the case of ‘charging electric vehicles’ across theories of Product Ecology, Rites of Passage, Exchange & Reciprocity, and Actor Network Theory.
Keywords
Design anthropology, Tangible interaction, Conversation starters
DOI
https://doi.org/10.21606/nordes.2023.128
Citation
Buur, J., Kjærsgaard, M., Fellegi, F., Schaldemose, S.,and Djajadiningrat, T.(2023) Theory instruments: Helping designers see the invisible, in Holmlid, S., Rodrigues, V., Westin, C., Krogh, P. G., Mäkelä, M., Svanaes, D., Wikberg-Nilsson, Å (eds.), Nordes 2023: This Space Intentionally Left Blank, 12-14 June, Linköping University, Norrköping, Sweden. https://doi.org/10.21606/nordes.2023.128
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Conference Track
researchpapers
Theory instruments: Helping designers see the invisible
With increasingly complex technologies entering the daily lives of people, human-technology relations haves become more difficult to observe and make sense of. In this paper we discuss experiments with designing ‘Theory Instruments’ that allow designers to collaboratively play with multiple theoretical perspectives on field research material. We argue that the physical, tangible nature of these instruments helps to convey and experience the richness of theoretical frameworks and can make designers and researchers aware of easily overlooked aspects in ethnographic observations. We unfold the case of ‘charging electric vehicles’ across theories of Product Ecology, Rites of Passage, Exchange & Reciprocity, and Actor Network Theory.