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Digital Culture & Society (DCS) Vol. 6, Issue 2 Laborious Play and Playful Work II [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 239x155x15 mm, kaal: 666 g
  • Sari: Digital Culture & Society
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Transcript Verlag
  • ISBN-10: 3837649555
  • ISBN-13: 9783837649550
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 239x155x15 mm, kaal: 666 g
  • Sari: Digital Culture & Society
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Transcript Verlag
  • ISBN-10: 3837649555
  • ISBN-13: 9783837649550
Teised raamatud teemal:
As DIY digital maker culture proliferates globally, research on these practices is also maturing. Still, particular terminologies dominate beyond their Western contexts, and technocultural histories of making are often rendered as over-simplified technomyths that render invisible diverse local practices. This special issue brings together contributions that highlight how historicising plays a role in mythmaking and the creation of social imaginaries. The peer-reviewed articles present cultural-historical perspectives, technology and design histories and historiographies, and alternative histories related to postcolonial resistance. The contributions illustrate the relevance of craft to making as a reparative practice after the Salvadoran Civil War and as a leisure activity to spark »innovation« in mid-century corporate culture; the political-economic background to the diffusion and differentiation of community workshops in contemporary Spain and post-war Germany; and the various aesthetics and politics of technology culture manifestos over the years.

The issue features an interview with Peter Harper of the Alternative Technology movement by Simon Sadler, as well as an interview with Felix Holm and Suné Stassen on the antecedents of making and design in South Africa. The special issue is rounded off with six short alternative (hi)stories of DIY making including multiple practices, geographies and temporalities.
Introduction: Alternative Histories in DIY Cultures and Maker Utopias 5(32)
Cindy Kohtala
Yana Boeva
Peter Troxler
I Field Research and Case Studies
Craft and Artisan Initiatives of the Salvadoran Civil War (1980-1992)
37(20)
Emilio Velis
Kate Samson
Isaac Robles
Daniel Rodriguez
Histories of Technology Culture Manifestos
Their Function in ShapingTechnology Cultures and Practices
57(28)
Ellen K. Foster
From Hacking to Making
The Commodif ication of Spanish DIY Spaces Since the 1990s
85(24)
David Cuartielles Ruiz
Cesar Garcia Saez
II Entering the Field
Tracing the History of DIY and Maker Culture In Germany's Open Workshops
109(12)
Regina Sipos
Kerstin Franzl
"What You Can Invent over the Weekend" and the Recurring History of Corporate DIY
121(14)
Samantha Shorey
III In Conversation with...
Makers and Design In South Africa
Technology and Craft Cultures and their Antecedents
135(18)
Felix Holm
Sune Stassen
Cindy Kohtala
Yana Boeva
The Exhibition of People's Technology 1972
153(34)
Peter Harper
Simon Sadler
IV Moments in Alternative (Hi)stories
The Craft of Small Wind Turbine Making
The Windmills of Scoraig and the Alternative Technology Movement in the UK
187(6)
Kostas Latoufis
Aristotle Tympas
Made In the Russian North
Narratives of Inventiveness from the Geographic Periphery
193(4)
Svetlana Usenyuk-Kravchuk
Czech DIY
A Historically Contingent Landscape
197(2)
Petr Gibas
Blanka Nyklova
Halasuru Traverses
Alternative Local Histories
199(4)
Anupama Gowda
The Trade Educators' Syndicate
Making 10 Retirement Lathes in the Twilight of Australian Manufacturing
203(4)
Jesse Adams Stein
Politics of Patents
Researching, Making and Wearing Alternative Histories of Clothing Inventions
207(4)
Kat Jungnickel
Biographical Notes 211
Cindy Kohtala is a postdoctoral researcher in the department of design, Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Espoo, Finland. Her research focuses on how peer-to-peer communities in fab labs and makerspaces organize themselves and address socio-environmental sustainability in their visions and practices. She also writes and lectures on urban activism and sustainable design. Yana Boeva is a postdoctoral researcher in the cluster of excellence on Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture at the University of Stuttgart. She has studied makerspaces and fab labs in Western Europe and Canada focusing on the sociopolitical and historical dimensions of digital fabrication in design. Her research explores the transformation of design, architectural practice, and different user perceptions with the inclusion of active matter and automation in contemporary fabrication models. Peter Troxler is a research professor at Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands. He studies the impact of readily available direct digital manufacturing technologies as well as of the makers' design and manufacturing practice on the creative and manufacturing industries; and the emergence of networked co-operation paradigms and business models based on lateral governance and on open source principles.