Anthropology and design
are both shaped by colonialism, though distinct in their disciplinary and historical trajectories. Today, these colonial legacies
are entangled in how they each shape, study, and intervene in the world. Design, often celebrated as a force of innovation,
carries with it a promise of better futures, of solutions, of progress. But as feminist and decolonial critiques remind us,
progress is never neutral. It is rooted in extraction and exclusion, and shaped by histories and presents of ableism, capitalism,
colonialism, patriarchy, and white supremacy. Therefore, the promise of better futures is not accessible to everyone in the
same way. But design, as a practice of worldmaking, is also a site of possibility—a way of shaping what could be. The question
remains: whose worlds are being created, and who is involved in this process? By contrast, anthropology often unsettles the
very narratives that design provides. It makes visible the frictions, contradictions, and inequalities embedded in everyday
life. It asks: whose futures are being imagined, and whose pasts are erased as a result of this? It critiques, it disrupts,
it refuses. However, in its critique, anthropology risks remaining at the level of refusal—treating design as an object of
study rather than engaging design and designers as partners in practice. Even worse, it sometimes replicates neoliberal designerly
modes of making while overlooking the histories of anti-capitalist, decolonial, and feminist critiques already present within
design. If design imagines, anthropology questions. But can anthropology also imagine otherwise? This symposium sits with
these tensions. What happens when anthropology and design meet—not in harmony, but in friction? How do their practices, methodologies,
and ways of knowing collide, entangle, and transform? Can the meeting of anthropology and design become a site of worldmaking—not
in the service of dominant social orders, but in response to the struggles of those who refuse them and are impacted by their
injustices?
Over two days of presentations, roundtable discussions, and conversational formats,
On the Seam
explores how anthropology and design intersect—whether in education, technology, or engaged practices within and beyond academia.
Through feminist and decolonial lenses, and practices emerging from within them, Dana Burton, Imad Gebrael, Farah Hallaba,
Mahmoud Keshavarz, Cherry-Ann Morgan, Prathima Muniyappa, Helen Pritchard, Bibiana Serpa, and Grace Turtle consider how knowledge
is produced, how power is held, and how certain ways of knowing, being, and making are rendered invisible. We ask whether
anthropology and design can be mobilized collaboratively—not to reproduce hegemonic structures, but to create space for more
just, situated, and pluralistic ways of inhabiting the world.
Please register in advance:
RegistrationOn the Seam: Anthropology, Design, and Situated Practices is a collaboration between Design History and Theory
and Futuress as part of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF)-funded research project directed by Professor Alison J. Clarke: Design
Anthropology: Cold War Industrial Design & Development (Grant DOI 10.55776/PAT4411223). The event is co-curated by Anna
N. Nagele and Maya Ober and co-coordinated by Mio Kojima and Anna N. Nagele. Visuals by Heba Daghistani.