Collaboration as Differentiation: Rethinking interaction intra-actively

Performance Philosophy 4 (2):410-433 (2019)
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Abstract

This paper is a invitation to interaction designers across disciplines to rethink the shaping of interaction “intra-actively”. Whether in human-computer interaction design or interdisciplinary and interactive performance practices, we propose to shift the emphasis from interaction between things, towards the intra-active processes of differentiation by which such things are continually made and unmade. Expanding interaction design by engaging in processes intended to bring awareness to the value systems involved in the local production of “interaction” and “things that interact” offers an opportunity to treat these values, and likewise the designers (be it engineers or choreographers or composers), as objects themselves in the design process. In the traditions of feminist, new materialist, and process philosophy we weave a narrative of appropriated perspectives in order to dismantle hegemonic accounts of correlationism and representationalism in interaction design, while investigating the concepts of boundary objects, diffraction, and critical appropriation as potential approaches to intra-active design.

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The Subject and Power.Michel Foucault - 1982 - Critical Inquiry 8 (4):777-795.
The Gift of Death.Jacques Derrida - 1996 - University of Chicago Press.
Sorting Things out: Classification and Its Consequences.Geoffrey C. Bowker & Susan Leigh Star - 2001 - Journal of the History of Biology 34 (1):212-214.
Chaosmosis: An Ethico-aesthetic Paradigm.Félix Guattari - 2006 - University of Washington Press.

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