|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
* One of the first critiques of participatory design processes that
are currently the fashion in design and business * highlights
political, social and methodological obstacles when designers turn
to design thinking, participation and "living labs" * uses global
examples to introduce a more critical and post-colonial perspective
on participation and social innovation throughout the book
* One of the first critiques of participatory design processes that
are currently the fashion in design and business * highlights
political, social and methodological obstacles when designers turn
to design thinking, participation and "living labs" * uses global
examples to introduce a more critical and post-colonial perspective
on participation and social innovation throughout the book
Making hacks into reality. It engages matter in ways that trespass
the boundaries between the civic realm and the state-assigned laws.
Even with primitive tools and skills, designing and making can
break open and repurpose arrangements of power. The proof is that
some crafts are so controversial-lock-picking, moonshining,
shoplifting, smuggling, sabotage-that they need to be controlled or
even outlawed. When designers and makers touch on these contested
realms, they run into trouble. This highly original book explores
how the material power of design and making can challenge
arrangements of agency and domination. Unpacking a series of
conflicting cases-from illegal making to the strategic and civic
use of crafts to manifest radical alternatives to the current
order-it shows how designers and makers can use even basic tools to
work towards more.
Our desires for fashion, our addiction to cheap clothes, our
fixation on surface looks . . . can we find ways to make what we
wear more positive? Here's a quirky, irreverent way to consider
what's a more sustainable way to be with-and still enjoy-fashion.
This little book shows that fashion isn't shallow but connects us
to the depths of existence. Especially today, fashion can tell us
something about life, and this series of meditations and
conversations between fashion "hacktivist" von Busch and Buddhist
teacher Josh Korda shows how a Buddhist perspective on fashion can
help us engage with clothes in wiser ways. It may seem a Buddhist
approach to fashion would be about denying fashion and living an
ascetic life in dull robes. However, Buddhism can teach us to be
more present and take more pleasure in fashion. With practice and
reflection, we can live a wiser life with the consumption of
clothes. Includes "action exercises" to help put ideas into
practice in your life and closet.
What is the relationship between the soul, or inner life, and what
we wear in the making of identity and belief? What bearing do
religious and political belonging, respectability, and resistance
have on the way in which we dress? Why have more traditional
religious practices been so prescriptive about body adornment?
Historically, fashionable dress and religion have been positioned
as polar opposites. Silhouettes of the Soul brings them together,
placing them in conversation with each other. By moving beyond
traditional, social scientific, and historical analysis of
religious attire and adornment the book presents a variety of
disciplinary approaches from across regional, social, and religious
locations. Contentious and challenging, as well as academically
rigorous, the book's diverse range of contributors - from fashion
and religious studies scholars, to designers, activists, monastics,
and journalists - explore the relationship between religion and
fashion, extending the meanings and possibilities of both dress and
spirituality. Combining interviews and personal stories with more
traditional theoretical analysis, Silhouettes of the Soul offers
new ways of looking at the relationship between religion, personal
convictions, and self-expression - our sense of self and our sense
of fashion.
What if fashion was a state? What kind of state would it be?
Probably not a democracy. Otto von Busch sees fashion as a
totalitarian state, with a population all too eager to enact the
decrees of its aesthetic superiority. Peers police each other and
deploy acts of judgment, peer-regulation, and micro-violence to
uphold the aesthetic order of fashion supremacy. Using four design
projects as tools for inquiry, Von Busch explores the seductive
desires of envy and violence within fashion drawing on political
theories. He proposes that the violent conflicts of fashion happen
not only in arid cotton fields or collapsing factories, but in the
everyday practice of getting dressed, in the judgments, sneers, and
rejections of others. Indeed, he suggests that feelings of
inclusion and adoration are what make us feel the pleasure of being
fashionable-of being seductive, popular, and powerful. Exploring
the conflicting emotions associated with fashion, Von Busch argues
that while the current state of fashion is bred out of fear, The
Psychopolitics of Fashion can offer constructive modes of
mitigation and resistance. Through projects that actively work
towards disarming the violent practices of dress, Von Busch
suggests paths towards a more engaging and meaningful experience of
fashion he calls "deep fashion."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|