Table of Contents
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Foreword in Japanese by Arturo Escobar
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Foreword and Acknowledgments
- Placing the birth of this book within epistemological and political contexts
- Acknowledgments
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Introduction
- Thesis and overview of the book
- From “development” to a pluralistic world
- A wager
- Designing a future with or without potential?
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Part One: Design for the Real World
- Chapter One: Moving out of the studio into the flow of natural social life
- The emergence of design in Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Macondo during a time when old media was new
- Reengaging with the world: aiming for participatory, human-centered, socially-oriented design
- Design as embedded interactive practice within situations
- Architecture and urbanism: experimentation, destabilization, and the reinvention of the vernacular
- The rise of design and digital technologies
- What does sustainability mean in design?
- Critical Design Studies and Speculative Design
- Design and politics
- Chapter Two: Elements for cultural studies of design
- Design anthropology and the anthropology of design
- Design anthropology
- Ethnography and design
- Anthropology of design
- Design in development and humanitarian fields
- Political ecology, feminist political ecology, and the emergence of political ontology
- Political ontology and Southern epistemologies
- Design under ontological occupation: political ontology of territorial struggles
- Chapter One: Moving out of the studio into the flow of natural social life
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Part Two: Ontological Reorientation of Design
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Chapter Three: What lies beneath our cultural background: rationalism, ontological dualism, relationality
- Rationalism and the Cartesian tradition
- Four beliefs at the epistemological core of modernity
- Issues and challenges of ontological dualism
- Political activation of relationality
- A move in the game: on the limits of modern social theory
- Relationality: transcending the divide of nature/culture
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Chapter Four: Overview of ontological design
- What is ontological design?
- Ontological design as a conversation for action
- Becoming human through design
- Post-human humans and artifacts
- What is sustainability through design?
- Ontological design and the issue of agency
- Non-dualism in everyday life? Barad’s question
- Ontology of the relationship between design and music
- Returning to ontological design
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Part Three: Designing for a Pluralistic World
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Chapter Five: Design for transition
- Discourse on transition
- Transition discourse in the Global North
- Three new areas for transition design: Transition Town Initiatives, degrowth, Commons
- Post-development, Buen Vivir, rights of nature, and the transition of civilization
- Comparing degrowth and post-development as transition imaginaries
- Transition towards post-extractivism
- Multiple designs for transition
- Framework for transition design at CMU
- Design for social innovation: the era where everyone designs
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Chapter Six: Autonomous Design and the Politics of Relationships and Commons
- Autopoiesis and biological autonomy
- Autonomy in social and cultural domains
- Achieving the commons: non-liberal political forms and social organizations
- Overview of autonomous design
- Additional features of autonomous design# Thought Experiment for Transition in the Cauca River Valley Region of Colombia Cauca River Valley: Misguided Regional Development Expanding the Image of Transition Design in the Cauca River Valley Conclusion Liberation of Mother Earth as a Principle of Transition Design Bridging the Gap in Design for Transition between Global North and Global South Some Unresolved Issues Epilogue
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Is the concept of Plurality slightly different in scope?
Is it related to Asymmetric Reality?