Design Anthropological Futures 2020
DOI: 10.4324/9781003085188-1
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Introduction: Design Anthropological Futures

Abstract: The future is here. Or so it has often been proclaimed by futurologists, scientists and engineers, as the fruits of science labs and cutting-edge technological gadgets are showcased, promising to make our lives more productive and more enjoyable. The public facade of design shows grand visions of future possibilities, yet every imperfect Now is also the concrete instantiation of what was once a vision of a bright future. Envisioned futures, as Bell and Dourish (2007) remind us, tend to differ radically from ho… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…However, the future is not an empty space awaiting projected visions from an incomplete present or a predefined destination that we can simply foresee and arrive at. Rather, futures are always already here as part of a continuous unfolding of the past and the present (Kjaersgaard et al, 2016). Drawing from STS, it is argued that the presentness and transformation of the world are always in the making; the world is always open to being otherwise.…”
Section: Design Futures and Thick Presentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the future is not an empty space awaiting projected visions from an incomplete present or a predefined destination that we can simply foresee and arrive at. Rather, futures are always already here as part of a continuous unfolding of the past and the present (Kjaersgaard et al, 2016). Drawing from STS, it is argued that the presentness and transformation of the world are always in the making; the world is always open to being otherwise.…”
Section: Design Futures and Thick Presentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There have also been approaches in design anthropology that are focused less on the distant nature of the future and more on the future that is "always already here, as a continuous unfolding of the past and present." (Kjaersgaard et al, 2016) Thus, from a methodological standpoint, there is a tension between the common framing of the future as distant and fictive, and the traditional focus on ethnography on the present and situated experience. Lindley et al propose anticipatory ethnography as one theoretical and practical approach to resolve this tension.…”
Section: Ethnography Futures and Design: Common Trajectoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As John Seely Brown points out, “[o]nce I imagine something new, then answering how to get from here to there involves steps of creativity…I can be creative in solving today’s problems, but if I can’t imagine something new, then Im stuck in the current situation” (2014). Through imagining an alternative to an aspect of liberal arts education, I am encouraging “a renewed curiosity about ways of living as being contingent, constructed, and transformable” (Kjaersgaard et al, 2016: 13). Such transformations look to a series of possible futures and help guide aspects of society, however subtly, toward preferable futures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The group proposed may appear to work against the pragmatic values placed on an accredited university education, but it is important to keep in mind that, as Ivan Illich wrote many years ago, “[m]ost learning is not the result of instruction…[but] rather the result of unhampered participation in a meaningful setting” (1970: 9). I work to “embrace open-ended speculation and concrete proposals for changes as modes of inquiry” (Kjaersgaard et al, 2016: 6) into educational alternatives in today’s world (see also Miller, 2015; Miller and Linder, 2015). Such speculative inquiry also points toward the distinction between possible, probable, and preferable futures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%