Synopses & Reviews
The renowned cultural theorist and media designer Anne Balsamo maintains that technology and culture are inseparable; those who engage in technological innovation are designing the cultures of the future. Designing Culture is a call for taking culture seriously in the design and development of innovative technologies. Balsamo contends that the wellspring of technological innovation is the technological imagination, a quality of mind that enables people to think with technology, to transform what is known into what is possible. She describes the technological imagination at work in several multimedia collaborations in which she was involved as a designer or developer. One of these entailed the creation of an interactive documentary for the NGO Forum held in conjunction with the UN World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995. (That documentary is included as a DVD in Designing Culture.) Balsamo also recounts the development of the interactive museum exhibit XFR: Experiments in the Future of Reading, created by the group RED (Research in Experimental Documents) at Xerox PARC. She speculates on what it would mean to cultivate imaginations as ingenious in creating new democratic cultural possibilities as they are in creating new kinds of technologies and digital media. Designing Culture is a manifesto for transforming educational programs and developing learning strategies adequate to the task of inspiring culturally attuned technological imaginations.
Review
andldquo;In this sweeping expansion of the classic innovation literature, Anne Balsamo portrays both the necessity and the challenge of cultivating the technological imagination in all of us. Her experiences as a researcher and designer who has worked across cultural domainsandmdash;as a humanist in the academy, as a research scientist in an industrial innovation center, and as an entrepreneur in Silicon Valleyandmdash;give her a unique ability to foster conversations among diverse groups of thinkers who want to engage with issues of culture and technological innovation. Balsamo not only describes ways to take culture seriously in the design of new technologies but also elaborates why it is ethically imperative to do so. Her insights into expanding the traditional considerations of socio-technical design to consider issues of culture are coming at a critical time. This is a great book that should be read by anyone interested in creating new technologies of imaginationandmdash;for enhancing learning in the twenty-first century and creating expressive cultural platforms for the future.andrdquo;andmdash;John Seely Brown, former Chief Scientist of Xerox Corporation and Director of Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC)
Review
andldquo;This is an erudite yet accessible cross-disciplinary text that makes a substantial contribution to the field of cultural studies, and also serves as a welcome and timely call to arms not only for scholars and scientists in the humanities and technology, but also for those engaged in educational policy, institutional strategy and innovation.andrdquo;
Review
“An example of the arguments made here is found in the Women of the World Talk Back interactive documentary on the DVD included with the book. A related webpage provides more examples. After an introduction that offers ten lessons about technoculture innovation, Balsamo turns to discussions of gendering the technological imagination, the performance of innovation, public interactives and the design of technological literacies, the university as a site of technocultural innovation, and an epilogue reviewing th work of a book in a digital age.” - Chris Sterling, CBQ
Review
“[T]he Designing Culture project weaves together a rich landscape that rewards deep exploration, investigation and interaction. In many ways, Designing Culture is an invitation, a jumping off place, an opportunity for others to take up its questions and tools, to apply them, to recapitulate, curate and refine, to engage the process and move all of it forward together. Indeed, I recommend that you find the book and get started today.” - Gabriel Peters-Lazaro, Institute for Multimedia Literacy
Review
andldquo;The argument pursued throughout the book is coherent and sustained. It makes a valuable intervention in thinking about design and design processes, technocultures and technological innovation. If you want a taster, try the website andndash; http://designingculture.net.andrdquo;
Review
andldquo;Designing Culture is a tour de force, offering a unique vision of the possibilities for a contemporary cultural studies. Refusing to separate research from pedagogy, technology from culture, or innovation from imagination, Anne Balsamo maps the concrete complexities of specific design processes, and opens up new ways of thinking aboutandmdash;and teachingandmdash;technocultures in relation to broader socio-political fields. Her book is required reading for anyone working with contemporary cultures.andrdquo;andmdash;Lawrence Grossberg, author of Cultural Studies in the Future Tense
Review
andldquo;Designing Culture is a road map to the technological imagination, provided by one of our best theorists and practitioners. Anne Balsamoandrsquo;s architecture of the future rests solidly on her own experiments, inventions, theoretical engagements, pedagogical innovations, and interactive hermeneutics. This is cultural theory at its best, brilliant, bold, and daring.andrdquo;andmdash;Cathy N. Davidson, Duke University
Review
andldquo;Designing Culture is a welcome and important intervention into many contemporary approaches to technology, innovation and design that construct technology as a final outcome of a singular imagining, or as a forceful determiner of socio-cultural practices. The book is powerful because of the way Balsamo makes what are crucial and profound interventions seem both obvious and logical. The breadth of topics and examples that she brings to the table to underpin her arguments also demonstrate the pertinence and real need for such a book across a whole set of disciplines, approaches and institutions.andrdquo;
Review
andldquo;Balsamoandrsquo;s passionate concerns with pedagogy, gender equality, and imagining new futures enliven every page... I drew much from Balsamoandrsquo;s energy and enthusiasm in inviting us to revisit a collection of some of the most ingenious experiments in the history of digital technologyandmdash;wonderfully original inventions of an extraordinarily creative generation that we have already come to take for granted, or even forgotten.andrdquo;and#160;
Synopsis
Looks at how cultural theory impacts technology design. The book will include a DVD that provides samples of the interactive technologies Balsamo discusses in the book.
Synopsis
The cultural theorist and media designer Anne Balsamo calls for transforming learning practices to inspire culturally attuned technological imaginations.
About the Author
Anne Balsamo is Dean of the School of Media Studies at The New School. She is a co-founder of Onomy Labs, a Silicon Valley technology design and fabrication company that builds cultural technologies. Previously, she was a member of RED (Research on Experimental Documents), a collaborative research group at Xerox PARC that created experimental reading devices and new media genres. She is the author of Technologies of the Gendered Body: Reading Cyborg Women, also published by Duke University Press.