From Prototyping to Worldbuilding
Lawrence Technological University
Humanity + Technology | CoAD | 25 March 2021
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Image care of Tiffany Chan.
Acknowledgements
I respectfully acknowledge that the University of Victoria is located on the unceded territory of the Lkwungen peoples and the Songhees, Esquimalt, and W̱SÁNEĆ First Nations, whose ongoing historical relationships with the land continue to this day.
I would also like to thank Franco Delogu, Paul Jaussen,
Emily Kutil, Guilia Lampis, and Tami Stank at LTU
for making this happen.
Prototyping the Past
(2013-18)
Researchers: Nina Belojevic, Tiffany Chan, Nicole Clouston, Laura Dosky,
Katherine Goertz, Evan Locke, Shaun Macpherson, Katie McQueston,
Danielle Morgan, Victoria Murawski, Zaqir Virani, and me
Supported by the Canada Foundation for Innovation and
the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
The Maker Lab is now the Praxis Studio.
Motivations for PTP
Address the labour and material processes of media histories
Add depth and lived experience to those histories
Attend to the contingencies and conjectures of design
Remake tech that no longer exists or existed only as a fiction
Treat prototyping as inquiry (inspired by Daniela Rosner)
For more, see "Prototyping the Past" in Visible Language,
"Design without a Future" in ACM Interactions, and
this MLab video by Teddie Brock, Tiffany Chan, Katherine Goertz,
Danielle Morgan, and Victoria Murawski
Image care of Danielle Morgan
Second Example (Extended):
Optophonics
Prototyping an early 20th-c. transcription machine
Research conducted across UVic Humanities and Fine Arts by
Tiffany Chan, Danielle Morgan, Victoria Murawski, and me.
Also in collaboration with Mara Mills at New York University.
For more, see the Reading Optophone Kit as well as
"Optophonic Reading, Prototyping Optophones" in Amodern.
Next Step: Wordbuilding
Better attend to contexts and engines
for storytelling (see Sullivan, Nieves, and Snyder)
Better account for conditions that encourage
both capacity and "debility" (see Puar)
Be more inclusive of low-tech
approachess (see Perner-Wilson)
Thank You
With thanks to Franco Delogu, Paul Jaussen, Emily Kutil,
Guilia Lampis, and Tami Stanko at LTU
Image care of Danielle Morgan
Resources:
Infrastructure
Infrastructure supported by the CFI and
UVic Humanities, English, Visual Arts, Libraries,
and the Humanities Computing and Media Centre
Image care of Danielle Morgan.
Resources:
Teaching
Courses taught in English as well as Technology and Society at UVic.
Image care of Danielle Morgan.
This is the final slide in the deck.