Critical by Design? Genealogies, Practices, Positions
Author(s)
Mareis, Claudia
Renner, Michael
Greiner-Petter, Moritz
Contributor(s)
Mareis, Claudia (editor)
Renner, Michael (editor)
Greiner-Petter, Moritz (editor)
Collection
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)Language
EnglishAbstract
The relationship between design and critique proves to be ambiguous. In its interventionist and constructive nature, design shares with other critical practices the premise of the shapeability and alterability of cultural, social, and political realities. Design can be seen as inherently critical and speculative as it sets out to project novel relationships between people, systems, and things from what it diagnoses as the status quo. At the same time, design is inevitably normative, if not often violent, as it partakes in stabilizing the past, normalizing the present condition and precluding just and sustainable futures. In the same way as design can unfold and make experienceable social boundaries, values and norms embedded in our material and visual culture, it is a major contributor to their manifestation and obscuration in the first place. This anthology aims to unpack the ambivalent tensions between design and critique. The contributions foster a vital rethinking of the foundational concepts and notions of critique that influence the field of design, question inherent blind spots and ideologies of the discipline, and expand understandings of what critical design practices could be.
Keywords
Design; Design Criticism; Material Culture; Critical Theory; Critical DesignDOI
10.14361/9783839461044ISBN
9783837661040, 9783837661040Publisher
transcript VerlagPublisher website
https://www.transcript-verlag.de/Publication date and place
Bielefeld, 2022Classification
Design, Industrial and commercial arts, illustration