2022
DOI: 10.46467/tdd38.2022.92-115
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Affective Bodies: Intimate Design Practices to Reinvent the Everyday

Abstract: This article investigates some of the implications of intimate design practices by presenting two academic projects carried out within the context of an uncertain present. It argues that design practices have the capacity to foster intimacy and affect through the lens of the politics of care. Drawing on the notion of affective bodies, the authors claim that design can explore new paths to reinvent the everyday, focusing on recent crisis-ridden contexts. The article examines how intimate practices that reformul… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…The articles evidence an association between care and design and in doing so, they propose a multi-faceted ethical positioning for design that designers can draw on as they design ways of being, products, services, clothing, buildings, houses and networks. An ethics of care (Pujadas 2022) and Spinoza's ethics of affection (Paez and Valtchanova 2022) are postulated as sensitive positions that recover feelings in the action of design. They acknowledge the influence of "the other" in our interactions, as well as one's own vulnerability and the importance of letting oneself be affected.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The articles evidence an association between care and design and in doing so, they propose a multi-faceted ethical positioning for design that designers can draw on as they design ways of being, products, services, clothing, buildings, houses and networks. An ethics of care (Pujadas 2022) and Spinoza's ethics of affection (Paez and Valtchanova 2022) are postulated as sensitive positions that recover feelings in the action of design. They acknowledge the influence of "the other" in our interactions, as well as one's own vulnerability and the importance of letting oneself be affected.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, it considers exposure to "the other", and a willingness to interrelate with this other-to interact, attempt to understand and respond-as a fundamental part of being both human and Gaia. Indeed, Roger Paez and Manuela Valtchanova (2022) argue for first person perspective approaches to foster intimacy and affect through the lens of a politics of care, exercising democracy through the human body as a radical relational unit that is enhanced by this care.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%