Publication | Open Access
A Foray Into Not-Quite Companion Species: Design Experiments With Urban-Animals as Significant Others
28
Citations
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References
2014
Year
EngineeringContemporary Design ResearchSocial SciencesSignificant OthersDesign ExperimentsInterdisciplinary DesignDesign ScienceUrban HistoryBehavioral SciencesCompanion SpeciesDesignUrban EcologyHuman-centered DesignCompanion AnimalParticipatory DesignAnimal BehaviourUrban DesignPhysical PlanningHuman-animal InteractionEvolutionary BiologyDesign ThinkingHuman-computer InteractionAnimal BehaviorUrban Space
This paper examines the project, Urban Animals and Us, as a journey - or foray - into the ‘terrain vague’ between people and (other) animals with whom we share urban space. Through three design experiments developed around speculative prototypes and co-design tools, we attempt to bring ’wild’ urban animals - like magpies and gulls into contact with the residents of a senior retirement home, to explore what new practices can arise between, otherwise, unconnected life-worlds. We expand the notion of companion species from philosopher of science Donna Haraway and begin to position the current project within a growing interest in animals in contemporary design research. Through analysis of the design experiments and the subsequent discussion, we argue, that a foray into interspecies relations, can inform the practical research agenda, and, help to re-articulate the dominant anthropocentricity of design research.
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