Arturo Escobar - Designs For The Pluriverse
Arturo Escobar - Designs For The Pluriverse
Arturo Escobar - Designs For The Pluriverse
the Pluriverse
New Ecologies for
the Twenty-First Century
Arturo Escobar
P REFAC E A N D A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S ix
Introduction 1
Conclusion 202
NO T ES 229
REFERE N C E S 259
I NDEX 281
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Preface and
Acknowledgments
The times they are a-changin,’ chanted Bob Dylan in a prophetic song back in
1964, at the dawn of the North American counterculture movement. That was
well before intensive globalization with its increasingly conspicuous collateral
damage, including climate change, widespread extractivism, extensive conflict
and social dislocation, and the inexpressible devastation of the Earth. Today
we would have to say, with climate justice activist Naomi Klein (2014), that
this changes everything. For both Dylan and Klein, as for so many visionaries
and activists worldwide and some farsighted designers, all of whom will be
among the protagonists of this book, Klein’s injunction is to be taken not only
seriously but literally. What this means is that what is at stake is not just a given
economic model (neoliberal capitalism), nor a set of cultural traits inimical to
life on the planet (say, rampant individualism and consumerism), high-level
policy reform (e.g., more comprehensive climate change protocols), geopo-
litical power struggles for re- and de-Westernization, or the ever-growing
military-industrial complex. As Latin American indigenous, black, and peas-
ant activists are wont to say, the contemporary crisis is a crisis of a particular
modelo civilizatorio, or civilizational model, that of patriarchal Western capi-
talist modernity. This is a striking claim, but one that more and more social
groups on the planet, in both the Global South and the Global North, are taking
to heart in the defense of their places, territories, and cultures. As we shall see in
the conclusion, the implication is none other than everything has to change. For
those for whom the current conjuncture “changes everything,” what needs
to change is an entire way of life and a whole style of world making. It goes
deeper than capitalism.
This book is about this civilizational conjuncture, its implications for de-
sign theory and practice, and the practical potential of design to contribute to
the profound cultural and ecological transitions seen as needed by a mounting
cadre of intellectuals and activists if humanity is to face effectively the interre-
lated crises of climate, food, energy, poverty, and meaning. The book is based
on the belief that this potential is real, as suggested by some trends within the
design profession as a whole, particularly among a small but perhaps grow-
ing subgroup of designers who are actually already embarked on the project
of “design for transitions.” Some of these designers claim that the crisis de-
mands nothing less than a reinvention of the human. Bold claims indeed. The
book finds its main epistemic and political inspiration and force, however, in
the political struggles of indigenous, Afrodescendant, peasant, and marginal-
ized urban groups in Latin America who mobilize with the goal of defending
not only their resources and territories but their entire ways of being-in-the-
world. Some of them do so in the name of their collective alternative “Life
Projects,” a concept that is also finding a propitious home in transition design
circles. The second wellspring of inspiration and ideas is the discourses and
practices of the visionaries and activists who, in so many places and spheres
of life, are engaged in bringing about the transitions. That’s at least how many
of them see it. A main goal of the book is to ask whether design can actually
contribute to enabling the communal forms of autonomy that underlie these
transition visions and Life Projects. This is to say that one of the major goals of
the book is to place cultural and political autonomy, as defined by the mobilized
grassroots communities in Latin America, firmly within the scope of design,
perhaps even at its center in the case of those wishing to work closely with
communities in struggle.
To nourish design’s potential for the transitions, however, requires a
significant reorientation of design from the functionalist, rationalistic, and
industrial traditions from which it emerged, and within which it still func-
tions with ease, toward a type of rationality and set of practices attuned to
the relational dimension of life. This is why the approach taken is ontological.
Design is ontological in that all design-led objects, tools, and even ser vices
bring about particular ways of being, knowing, and doing. This ontological
dimension of design will be discussed at length in the book. Major sources
for the reorientation of the rationalistic tradition lie within the nondualist
and relational forms of life effectively present among many of the peoples en-
This book is the result of seven years of research and teaching on design, rela-
tionality, and transitions at the upper-division and graduate levels; the back-
ground, however, goes much farther back. Given that I am not a professional
designer nor a theorist within a design school, I feel it is important to situate
this work and to convey its emergent character within design and scholarly
trends, as well as within my ongoing intellectual-political projects. Making ex-
plicit the genealogy of my interest in design will also help me explain the ways
in which my take on design is necessarily idiosyncratic and purposeful. I have
worked around design themes for many decades. Chemical engineering (my
undergraduate major) is about the design of production systems (chemical
plants and operations) based on the thermodynamic analysis of the flows of
matter and energy that go into these systems.1 Paradoxically, the engineering
Acknowledgments
2 Introduction
book design refers to much more than the creation of objects (toasters, chairs,
digital devices), famous buildings, functional social ser vices, or ecologically
minded production. What the notion of design signals in this work—despite
design’s multiple and variegated meanings—is diverse forms of life and, often,
contrasting notions of sociability and the world.
The book is divided into three main parts. Part I introduces some elements
from the design literature at present and offers an outline for a cultural stud-
ies approach to design. I pay particular attention to those works that imagine
a new social role and modes of operation for design (chapter 1). There are
abundant ideas about how design is being transformed in practice, and how
to hasten the change, although as we shall see few of these works question the
cultural-philosophical armature from which design practice itself emerges
(broadly, patriarchal capitalist modernity). Taken as a whole, these trends
reveal the existence of a critical design studies field under construction. In
chapter 2, recent theoretical trends and design debates in anthropology, ecol-
ogy, architecture and urbanism, digital studies, development studies, political
ecology, and feminist theory are reviewed to ascertain their contribution to
an understanding of the nexus among design, culture, and the construction
of reality specific to the current historical conjuncture. The aim of this part is
to introduce diverse literatures to diverse audiences: design literatures to non-
design readers and, conversely, up-to-date social theory approaches to design
experts with little background in the social sciences and the humanities.1
Part II proposes an ontological reading of the cultural background from
which design emerges, and it goes on to outline an ontological approach to de-
sign. Chapter 3 presents a particular analysis of the background that enables a
unique answer to the question of design’s reorientation. Inspired by a “minor”
perspective within the biology of cognition (spearheaded by the original work
of Chilean biologists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela, 1980, 1987),
this chapter develops a reading of the background in terms of the “rationalistic
tradition,” often associated with the objectifying epistemology of Cartesianism.
It summarizes well-known arguments about the dualist ontology that, linked
to such a tradition, characterizes the prevailing versions of Western modernity.
What is new here is the idea that such a critique of dualisms (mind/body, self/
other, subject/object, nature/culture, matter/spirit, reason/emotion, and so
forth) is arising from many different intellectual and activist domains, not just
Introduction 3
academic critiques. My argument is that the convergence of these tendencies
is fostering the creation of an ontological-political field that questions anew,
and goes beyond, these dualisms. The multisited emergence of such a field is
making progressively perceptible—theoretically and politically—a range of
alternatives, increasingly conceptualized in terms of the notion of relational-
ity. This concept offers a different, and much-needed, way of re/conceiving
life and the world, and a potential new foundation for design.
With these pieces and a renewed mode of access to the question of re-
orienting design in place, chapter 4 moves on to outline the concept of on-
tological design. Initially proposed by Terry Winograd and Fernando Flores
in the mid-1980s, it has remained little developed, with the few exceptions
featured prominently in this book. Ontological design stems from a seem-
ingly simple observation: that in designing tools (objects, structures, policies,
expert systems, discourses, even narratives) we are creating ways of being.
A key insight here is what Anne-Marie Willis (2006, 80) has called “the dou-
ble movement of ontological designing,” namely, that we design our world,
and our world designs us back—in short, design designs. The ontological
design approach is found at the basis of Tony Fry’s proposals for a transition
from sustainability to “Sustainment,” as well as a handful of recent transi-
tion design proposals. In this chapter I present ontological design as a means
to think about, and contribute to, the transition from the hegemony of mo-
dernity’s one-world ontology to a pluriverse of socionatural configurations;
in this context, designs for the pluriverse becomes a tool for reimagining and
reconstructing local worlds.
Part III explores this proposition in depth. Chapter 5 brings to the fore-
front the cultural-political background within which a pluriversal design
practice arises as a tangible possibility and as more than just a figment of the
intellectual imagination. This chapter takes a sweeping look at the rich pro-
duction, over the past decade, of cultural and ecological transition narratives
and discourses in both the Global North and the Global South. It summarizes
emergent notions and movements in the Global North, such as degrowth,
commoning, conviviality, and a variety of pragmatic transition initiatives. For
the Global South, it examines current debates and struggles around Buen Vivir
(well-being), the rights of nature, communal logics, and civilizational transitions,
particularly as these debates are taking place in some Latin American countries,
pondering whether they can be seen as instances of the pluriverse re/emerging.
The argument here is that these transition imaginations, which posit the need
for radical transformations in the dominant models of life and the economy,
4 Introduction
might constitute the most appropriate framework for an ontological refram-
ing of design. Two interconnected reframings are then presented: an evolv-
ing “Transition Design” framework being developed as a graduate training
and research program at Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Design, and
Manzini’s conceptualization of design for social innovation and transition to
a new civilization.
Finally, chapter 6 develops the notion of autonomous design as a partic-
ular ontological design approach in dialogue with the transition visions and
design frameworks. The basic insight is, again, seemingly straightforward: that
every community practices the design of itself. This was certainly the case with
traditional communities (they largely endogenously produced the norms by
which they lived their lives), as it is today with many communities, in both the
Global South and the Global North, that are thrown into the need of design-
ing themselves in the face of ever-deepening manifestations of the crises and
the inescapable techno-economic mediation of their worlds. In other words, if
we accept the thesis—voiced by social movement activists, transition vision-
aries, and some designers—that the current crises point at a deeper civiliza-
tional crisis, then the autonomous design of new forms of life and their own
life projects appears to many communities as an eminently feasible, perhaps
unavoidable, theoretico-political project; for some, it is even a question of
their survival as distinct worlds. I will illustrate this notion of autonomous de-
sign with a transition exercise for a particular region in Colombia’s southwest,
envisioning a transformation from the ecologically and socially devastating
model that has been in place for over a hundred years to a codesign process for
the construction of a life-enhancing regional pluriverse.
A fundamental aspect of autonomous design is the rethinking of commu-
nity or, perhaps more appropriately, the communal; this rekindled concern
with the communal is in vogue in critical circles in Latin America and in transi-
tion movements in Europe concerned with the relocalization of food, energy,
and the economy and with transition towns and commoning, among others.2
Hence, this chapter attempts to place autonomy and the communal at the center
of design. (That this has nothing to do with the individual autonomy imagined
by liberalism will become clear throughout the book. In fact, the opposite
is the case.) The inspiration for this proposition comes from the view that
autonomy is the most fundamental feature of the living; in Maturana and Va-
rela’s terminology, to be explained in chapters 3 and 6, autonomy is the key to
autopoiesis, or the self-creation of living systems. This proposition will serve
as a partial anchor for proposing a particular practice and way of thinking
Introduction 5
about the relation among design, politics, and life, to be called autonomous
design.
At the dawn of the development age, a group of reputable United Nations ex-
perts characterized the project to come as follows: “There is a sense in which
rapid economic progress is impossible without painful adjustments. Ancient
philosophies have to be scrapped; old social institutions have to disintegrate;
bonds of caste, creed, and race have to burst; and large numbers of persons
who cannot keep up with progress have to have their expectations of a com-
fortable life frustrated. Very few communities are willing to pay the full price
of economic progress” (United Nations, Department of Social and Economic
Affairs 1951, 15). In hindsight, we can consider this pronouncement as a daring,
albeit utterly arrogant, design vision. The notion of underdevelopment was just
being concocted, and the “Third World” had not yet been born. A new design
dream was overtaking the world; we are still engulfed by it, even though, for
many, as for the Earth itself, the dream has increasingly turned into a night-
mare. What the United Nations envisioned was a sweeping “elimination de-
sign” (Fry 2011) of its own, aimed literally at scrapping the vernacular design
and endogenous practices that for centuries had nourished, for better or
worse, the lives of millions throughout the centuries. Almost overnight, a di-
verse range of rich and vibrant traditions were reduced to being worth, literally,
nothing: nondescript manifestations of an allegedly indubitable fact, “underde-
velopment.” Yet this dream made perfect sense to millions and was embraced
by elites almost worldwide. Such was the power of this design imagination.
Not only that, the discourse still holds sway today, as witnessed by the newest
round of self-serving debates and policy maneuvers set in place in 2015, and for
the next fifteen years, under the rubric of the post-2015 development agenda
and the scuffle over a new set of sustainable development indicators. As Fry
puts it, “the world of the South has in large part been an ontological design-
ing consequence of the Eurocentric world of the North” (2017, 49). Thus, it is
necessary to liberate design from this imagination in order to relocate it within
the multiple onto-epistemic formations of the South, so as to redefine design
questions, problems, and practices in ways more appropriate to the South’s
contexts.
Today, faced with the realities of a world transformed by a changing cli-
mate, humans are confronted with the irrefutable need to confront the design
6 Introduction
disaster that development is, and hence to engage in another type of elimi-
nation design, this time of the structures of unsustainability that maintain
the dominant ontology of devastation. The collective determination toward
transitions, broadly understood, may be seen as a response to the urge for
innovation and the creation of new, nonexploitative forms of life, out of the
dreams, desires, and struggles of so many groups and peoples worldwide.
Could it be that another design imagination, this time more radical and con-
structive, is emerging? Might a new breed of designers come to be thought of
as transition activists? If this were to be the case, they would have to walk hand
in hand with those who are protecting and redefining well-being, life projects,
territories, local economies, and communities worldwide. These are the har-
bingers of the transition toward plural ways of making the world. The order is
rapidly fadin’ / And the first one now will later be last / For the times they are a-
changin.’ Perhaps the pluriverse is indeed rising, as the Zapatista of Chiapas
and those engaged in so many other popular struggles have been saying for
over two decades now.
The Stakes
Where did it all begin, indeed? What are the stakes? Can “they” be stopped?
There are scores of answers to these questions, of course. I would like to con-
sider two particular takes on them, far from the current limelight of critical
analyses, but perhaps more radical, to end this introduction. The first, by cul-
tural critic Ivan Illich, involves as much a theory of crisis as a transition frame-
work. The second, by several Latin American and European feminists, lucidly
unveils the longest historical roots of the contemporary malaise, locating
Introduction 7
patriarchy at the center of it. Besides their farsighted vision, which makes
them particularly appropriate for thinking about transitions, they have the ad-
ditional value of embodying a strong dissenting design imagination. Reading
the feminists’ critical theory of patriarchy and Illich’s acerbic but enlightening
analyses of today’s machine-centered civilization, one could reach the con-
clusion that indeed Ain’t no use: nobody can stop them now. Yet, at the same
time, their insights about transitions to relational and convivial ways of being,
knowing, and doing are concrete and real, as in many other transition narra-
tives on which we will draw.
Illich is best known for his trenchant criticism of the deleterious char-
acter of expert-based institutions, from medicine and education to energy
and transportation, and of the disempowering effects of the feminization
of work and the narrowing down of gender struggles to a matter of indi-
vidual economic and political equality. Published in 1973, Tools for Con-
viviality summarized many of his critiques, setting them in the context of
a political vision, namely, the reconstruction of convivial modes of liv-
ing, or what he termed conviviality. The book was self-consciously written
as “an epilogue to the industrial era,” in the conviction that “in the advanced
stage of mass production, any society produces its own destruction” (2015,
7, 9).4 His key concept, that of the industrial mode of production, enabled
him to conceptualize the threat to the human that arises when tools, broadly
understood, reach thresholds beyond which they become irremediably dam-
aging to people and the environment. The steady erosion of limits started in
the seventeenth century with the harnessing of energy and the progressive
elimination of time and space, gained force with the Industrial Revolution,
and accomplished a complete restructuring of society in the twentieth century.
Many technologies or “tools” based on specialized knowledge, such as medi-
cine, energy, and education, surpassed their thresholds sometime in the early to
mid-twentieth century. Once these thresholds were passed, the technologies
became not only profoundly destructive in material and cultural terms but
fatally disabling of personal and collective autonomy. The concentration of
power, energy, and technical knowledge in bureaucracies (the State) resulted
in the institutionalization of these tools and enabled a tight system of control
over production and destruction. Illich referred to this process as instrumenta-
tion and showed how it systematically destroys convivial modes of living. The
result was a mega-tooled society embedded in multiple complex systems that
curtail people’s ability to live dignified lives.
8 Introduction
The corollary is that society has to be reinstrumentalized to satisfy the
twin goals of conviviality and efficiency within a postindustrial framework.
This goal requires facing head-on the threats that accelerated growth and the
uncontrollable expansion of tools pose to key aspects of the human experi-
ence, including the following: humans’ historical localization in place and
nature; people’s autonomy for action; human creativity, truncated by in-
strumentalized education, information, and the media; people’s right to an
open political process; and humans’ right to community, tradition, myth,
and ritual—in short, the threats to place, autonomy, knowledge, political
process, and community. Anticipating degrowth debates (chapter 5), Illich
spoke about the need for an agreement to end growth and development.
To a world mired in ever-increasing production, while making this produc-
tion seem ever easier, Illich counterposed not only the fallacy of the growth
imperative, thus making its costs visible, but the cultivation of a joyful and
balanced renunciation of the growth logic and the collective acceptance of
limits.5
What Illich proposed was a radical inversion, away from industrial pro-
ductivity and toward conviviality. “To the threat of technocratic apocalypse,
I oppose the vision of a convivial society. Such a society will rest on social con-
tracts that guarantee to each person the broadest and freest access to the tools
of the community, on the condition of not hampering others’ equal freedom
of access. . . . A plurality of limited tools and of convivial organizations would
foster a diversity of modes of living that would acknowledge both memory and
the inheritance from the past as creation” (2015, 26–28; emphasis added). This
ethical position involves an alternative technical rationality; as we shall see,
it lends support to the emphasis by social movements on ancestrality as the
basis for autonomy, and by transition designers on futurality, or the creation
of futures that have a future, as a fundamental design principle. As Illich adds,
convivial tools will have to be efficacious in fostering people’s creative auton-
omy, social equity, and well-being, including collective control over energy
and work. This means that tools need to be subjected to a political process of
a new kind. As science and technology create new energy sources, this control
becomes all the more important. To achieve these goals, in Illich’s view, it is
imperative to impose limits on the expansion of production; these limits have
the potential to enable the flourishing of a different kind of autonomy and
creativity. At the end of the process, there might emerge a society that values
sobriety and austerity, where people relearn dependence on others instead of
Introduction 9
surrendering to an altogether powerful economic, political, and technocratic
elite. The process is eminently political:
Let us leave Illich for a moment and consider Claudia von Werlhof ’s account
of patriarchy as the source of the contemporary civilizational model that is
wreaking havoc on humans and nature. If one were to ask people on the street
to name the main crisis sources, very few would name patriarchy. Why, then,
go there? There is no doubt that, for von Werlhof, the roots of the Western
civilizational crisis lie in the long development, over the past five thousand
years, of patriarchal cultures at the expense of matriarchal ones. For this au-
thor, patriarchy goes well beyond the exploitation of women; it explains the
systematic destruction of nature. Conversely, matriarchy is not defined by the
predominance of women over men, but by an entirely different conception of
life, not based on domination and hierarchies, and respectful of the relational
fabric of all life. This is why, for all cultures, it can be said that “in the begin-
ning, there was the mother” (in the last instance, Mother Earth), that is, the
relation, as tends to still be the case today for many indigenous peoples, who
retain a range of matriarchal practices. Progressively, however, men under-
mined this fundament of life in their attempt to usurp women’s power to cre-
ate life through what von Werlhof labels “the patriarchal alchemy.” While in its
original connotation alchemy referred to a mode of knowledge based on ob-
servation of the natural rhythm of life, for the patriarchs it became a practice
of destruction, the fragmenting of the elements of matter to eventually pro-
duce, out of the isolated elements, what was considered most valuable, such
10 Introduction
as gold or the philosopher’s stone. Destruction progressively became the pro-
gram to be advanced, contradictorily in the name of creating life; eventually,
with modernity and the dominance of the machine, the program transmuted
into the search for endless progress and the promise of a ceaselessly better
world. Monotheistic religions have been a main component of this program,
with the pater as a godlike figure. After more than five hundred years of pa-
triarchal Western modernity, this “alchemic civilization” based on “creation
through destruction” has seemingly become global, always at war against life.
From von Werlhof ’s perspective, capitalism is the last phase of this patriarchal
civilization.6
According to several Latin American feminists, the origin of this last phase
is found in the Conquest of America and the instauration of the modern/
colonial world system. Looking at this historical process from the perspective
of patriarchy is essential to understand the transformations ushered in by mo-
dernity. To this end, Argentinian feminist anthropologist Rita Segato (2015)
introduces a distinction between the “world-village” (mundo-aldea) of com-
munal worlds, with their dual-gender ontology (based on complementary du-
alities, organized on the basis of relations of reciprocity, and not on a binary
between intrinsically independent pairs), and the “world-state,” with its dual-
ist ontologies, which progressively occupies communal worlds through the
constitution of a public sphere dominated by men and an increasingly subor-
dinated feminine private sphere. It was thus that the low-intensity patriarchies
of communal worlds gave way to what Segato calls the high-intensity patri-
archy of capitalist modernity. From this perspective, patriarchy is at the root
of all forms of subordination, including racial, colonial, and imperial domi-
nation, along with the resulting pedagogy of cruelty, as Segato names it, im-
posed on all societies. There is agreement among the growing cadre of Latin
American autonomous, decolonial, and communitarian feminists, as Aymara
intellectual-activist Julieta Paredes (2012) puts it, that it was on the bodies of
women that humanity learned how to dominate. The corollary is to always
analyze historically the entanglement of diverse forms of patriarchy, from the
autochthonous and indigenous to the modern.7
Patriarchal alchemy engulfs most aspects of life; as individuals, we see ourselves
in terms of a type of self-realization that is also a process of self-alchemization,
of always re/making ourselves through production and self-improvement. Our
spirituality often gets impoverished, trapped in the separation between matter
and spirit; the body is debased by patriarchal religions, far from the spiritual-
ity of Earth. Progressively, humans start to experience a distancing from all
Introduction 11
life, which includes, unwittingly, those claiming equality within the same life-
destroying patriarchal regimes. Once in the modern period, the world comes
to be increasingly built without attachment to place, nature, landscape, space,
and time—in short, without reference to the hic et nunc (the here and now)
that has shaped most human existence throughout history.8 From these femi-
nist perspectives, what is thus needed is a politics for an other civilization that
respects, and builds on, the interconnectedness of all life, based on a spiritual-
ity of the Earth, and that nourishes community because it acknowledges that
love and emotion are important elements of knowledge and of all of life.
The notion of the interconnectedness of all life is central to ecology, to
most transition narratives, and to the theoretical currents discussed in this
book in terms of relationality (chapter 2). All living, human or not, takes place
within a relational matrix. The forgetting of this fact led to the development of
patriarchal cultures. North Carolina ecologist and theologian Thomas Berry
(one of the transition thinkers discussed in chapter 5) echoes von Werlhof ’s
analysis in a profound sense. For him, “a new interpretation of Western his-
torical development is emerging through the concept of patriarchy. . . . The
entire course of Western civilization is seen as vitiated by patriarchy, the ag-
gressive, plundering, male domination of our society” (1988, 138–140). This
expanded role ascribed to patriarchy, he adds, has yet to reach the public
so that it becomes possible to imagine a postpatriarchal, genuinely ecologi-
cal (“omnicentric”) world. Emerging from the analysis is the need for a new
historical mission, that of ushering in “a period when a mutually-enhancing
human-earth relationship might be established” (145). This can be arrived at
only by working against the grain of the four key establishments that support
the modern patriarchal vision: governments, corporations, universities, and
organized religion.
These lessons resonate with the systematic comparison of “European pa-
triarchal culture” and “matristic cultures” by Humberto Maturana and Ger-
man psychologist Gerda Verden-Zöller (1993). Like the feminist writers just
discussed, these authors adopt an ontological conception of the cultures of
matriarchy and patriarchy: “In a patriarchal culture both women and men are
patriarchal, and in a matristic culture, both men and women are matristic. Ma-
tristic and patriarchal cultures are different manners of living, different forms
of relating and manners of emotioning, different closed networks of conversa-
tion that are realized in each case by both men and women” (2008, 112).9 Plac-
ing the rise of Indo-European patriarchal culture within a historical and evolu-
tionary context, these authors arrive at some seemingly startling conclusions
12 Introduction
within an overall perspective they call “the biology of love.” Patriarchal culture
is defined as characterized by actions and emotions that value competition,
war, hierarchies, power, growth, procreation, the domination of others, and
the appropriation of resources, combined with the rational justification of it
all in the name of truth. In this culture, which engulfs most modern humans,
we live in mistrust and seek certitude through control, including control of
the natural world.
Conversely, historical matristic cultures were characterized by conversa-
tions highlighting inclusion, participation, collaboration, understanding, re-
spect, sacredness, and the always-recurrent cyclic renovation of life. With the
rise of pastoral societies, the transition from one culture to the other started and
has not ceased ever since. Matristic modes of being persist in contemporary
cultures, despite the prevailing patriarchal approach. They survive, for in-
stance, and however partially and contradictorily, in mother-child or parent-
child relations, in love relations, in science, and in participatory democracy.
Of crucial importance in this conception is the recognition that the basis of
biological existence is the act of emotioning, and that social coexistence is
based on love, prior to any mode of appropriation and conflict that might set
in. Patriarchal modern societies fail to understand that it is emotioning that
constitutes human history, not reason or the economy, because it is our de-
sires that determine the kinds of worlds we create.10
Matristic thought and culture arise and thrive within this biology of love;
they take place “in the background of the awareness of the interconnected-
ness of all existence; hence, they can only be lived in the continuous implicit
understanding that all human actions have implications for the totality of ex-
istence” (Maturana and Verden-Zöller 1993, 47). In this view, the change in
human emotioning from interconnectedness to appropriation and control
thus emerges as a crucial cultural development justified, with the advent of
modernity, by a certain rationality. Hence, it is necessary to cultivate again
the harmony of coexistence through the equality and unity of all living beings
within the ongoing, recursive, and cyclical renovation of life. The ethical and
political implications are clear:
Introduction 13
agreement and consensus on the generation of common projects of coex-
istence are accepted. . . . It allows us to see and to live within the interaction
and coparticipation of everything that is alive in the living of all the living;
patriarchal living [on the contrary] restricts our understanding of life and
nature because it leads us to search for a unidirectional manipulation of
everything, given the desire to control living. (105)
Retaking this “neglected path” implies reversing the devaluing of emotioning
in relation to reason, which inevitably undermines social coexistence. For von
Werlhof, the implications are equally momentous:
“There is only one solution,” she continues, considering the Zapatista experi-
ence: “the reconstruction of a nonoccidental civilization not only in Mexico
but also in the West and throughout the entire planet” (195). We will have to
wait until the last chapters of this book to ascertain whether this seemingly
utopian call has any purchase with concrete social actors. Suffice it to say for
now that this notion of civilizational change is being seriously entertained by
many transition theorists and visionaries, from ecologists and climate activ-
ists to spiritual teachers. Overcoming patriarchy requires an internal cultural
healing, the revitalization of traditions and the creation of new ones, the re-
alization that a civilization based on the love of life is a far better option than
one based on its destruction. Some indigenous peoples in the Americas see
themselves as engaged in the Liberación de la Madre Tierra (the Liberation of
Mother Earth), well beyond the traps of the alchemic civilization of corporate
and market globalization, which they often refer as the “project of death.” For
them, it is time to abandon “the superstitious belief in progress and in the
modern epoch as the best of all worlds, that is, in the alchemic project” (von
Werlhof 2015, 85). This is also the meaning of the “new matriarchies” that von
Werlhof and others intuit, those that while inspired by matriarchal principles
14 Introduction
of the past are becoming transformative forces appropriate to the worlds of
today.
It bears emphasizing that the importance of this long-term analysis of pa-
triarchy and Western modernity as the background of the contemporary crisis
lies in the fact that these authors see patriarchy as an active historical reality; it
is not a thing of the past. Patriarchal ways of being are central to the historic-
ity of our being-in-the-world at present. This awareness needs to be brought
to bear in any significant reorientation of design. As Susan Stewart remarks,
“the excision of history from design thinking isolates the understanding that
informs the design act from any understanding of the temporal trajectories in
which it participates” (2015, 276). Recognizing those historical aspects of our
historicity that seem buried in a long-gone past—which requires paying atten-
tion to the realm of myth and story in shaping our worlds—is part and parcel
of design’s coming to terms with the very historicity of the worlds and things
of human creation in the current tumultuous age.
Readers might rightly wonder what these ideas about autonomy, relational
living, and so forth have to do with design, ontological or other wise. More-
over, is autonomous design not an oxymoron? The possibility I am trying to
ascertain is quite straightforward in principle: whether some sort of ontologi-
cally oriented design could function as design for, and from, autonomy. Here
again we confront one of the key issues of this book: can design be extricated
from its embeddedness in modernist unsustainable and defuturing practices
and redirected toward other ontological commitments, practices, narratives,
and performances? Moreover, could design become part of the tool kit for
transitions toward the pluriverse? What would that imply in terms of the de-
sign of tools, interactions, contexts, and languages in ways that fulfill the onto-
logical design principle of changing the ways in which we deal with ourselves
and things so that futuring is enabled?
We find distinct yet complementary clues to these questions in the activist
and scholarly worlds. If the conditions ever existed for constructing a design
agenda from within the theoretico-political space of the social struggles of the
day, that moment is today. In 2001 the World Social Forum already announced
this historical possibility in the Brazilian city of Porto Alegre; its call to action
still reverberates: Another world is possible. The World Social Forum echoed what
the Zapatista of Chiapas had already voiced with amazing lucidity and force:
Introduction 15
Queremos un mundo donde quepan muchos mundos (We want a world where
many worlds fit). Is it possible to read in these popular slogans the seeds of a
radical design imagination? “Queremos ser nosotros los que diseñemos y con-
trolemos nuestros proyectos de vida” (We ourselves want to be those who de-
sign and control our life projects), says the Mapuche poet Elicura Chihuailaf
(quoted in Rocha 2015, 97). One can see instances of this determination up
and down Latin America, from the Zapatista of Chiapas and the autonomous
communities in Oaxaca to the nasa and misak in Colombia’s southwest and
the Mapuche in Chile and Argentina, but also among a growing number of
campesino and Afrodescendant communities in a number of countries and
equally in some urban settings. This determination experienced a veritable
takeoff around 1992, coinciding with the five-hundredth anniversary of the
so-called discovery of America and the renaming of the continent by indig-
enous movements as Abya Yala.11 With this renaming, the indigenous peoples
achieved a madurez telúrica, or civilizational coming-of-age, as their activists
put it.
This coming-of-age is foregrounding a range of forms of pensamiento
autonómico, or autonomous thought. Together with the recrafting of com-
munal forms of knowing, being, and doing, these notions—autonomía and
comunalidad—and their associated practices may be seen as laying the ground
for a new design thought with and within communities. Experiences embody-
ing the search for autonomy can be witnessed in many corners of Latin America
and the Caribbean, particularly in locations where brutal forms of extractive
globalization are being resisted: in struggles for the defense of seeds, com-
mons, mountains, forests, wetlands, lakes, and rivers; in actions against white/
mestizo and patriarchal rule; in urban experiments with art, digital technolo-
gies, neoshamanic movements, urban gardens, alternative energy, and so forth.
Taken as a whole, these manifestations of multiple collective wills evince the
unwavering conviction that another world is indeed possible. Many of these
social movements can be seen as processes of “matriarchalization,” of defend-
ing and re/creating relational and cooperative modes of living with humans
and nature.
Let us shift to the world of design scholarship. Australian design theorist
Tony Fry speaks of the “defuturing effects” of modern design, by which he
means design’s contribution to the systemic conditions of structured unsus-
tainability that eliminate possible futures. It is thus important to recover our
future-imagining capacity, for which he proposes a transition from the En-
lightenment to a new horizon of “Sustainment,” a new age capable of nourish-
16 Introduction
ing those relational ways of being-in-the-world capable of countering the on-
tology of defuturing. Design theorists Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby (2013)
likewise argue for design practices that enable collective discussion about how
things could be—what they term speculative design. “Design speculations,”
they write, “can act as a catalyst for collectively redefining your relationship to
reality” by encouraging—for instance, through what-if scenarios—the imagi-
nation of alternative ways of being (2). Such critical design can go a long way,
in their view, against design that reinforces the status quo. “Critical design is
critical thought translated into materiality. It is about thinking through design
rather than through words and using the language and structure of design to
engage people. . . . All good critical design ofers an alternative to how things are”
(35; emphasis added). That we are in the age of “speculative everything” is a
hopeful thought, assuming it fuels the kinds of “social dreaming” (169) that
might result in “the multiverse of worlds our world could be” (160). The on-
tological impetus of speculative design will be explored at length in subse-
quent chapters, particularly through the notion of design for transitions to
the pluriverse.
Speculation is rampant in all kinds of directions. It is useful to identify two
opposing design fictions as a heuristic, with a whole range in between. At one
end we find matristic, convivial, futuring, and, broadly speaking, relational
visions that highlight the re/creation of worlds based on the horizontal rela-
tion with all forms of life, respecting the human embeddedness in the natu-
ral world. At the other end of the spectrum there lies the dream, held by the
flashy techno-fathers of the moment, of a posthuman world wholly created by
Man. This is the world, for instance, of synthetic biology, with its gene-centric
view of life; of booming techno-alchemies for genetic enhancement and the
prolongation of life; of robotics, cyborgian fantasies, space travel, nanotech-
nology, unlimited 3-d printing, and much more; of the bizarre geoengineering
schemes concocted in corporate boardrooms as solutions to climate change;
and of those advocating for the “Great Singularity,” a technologically induced
transformation “when humans transcend biology,” in which life would finally
be perfected, perhaps as in the world-without-mothers of artificial intelligence
fictions such as those portrayed in the film Ex-Machina, where women’s ability
to give life is finally completely usurped since wo/man is wholly created by
man through the machine.12 Are these masculine imaginaries of creation—
design imaginations for sure—really universal, or unavoidable, as their fathers
pretend? One thing is certain: were it to succeed, this world would cease
to have any resemblance to the original nature from which all life stemmed
Introduction 17
(Plumwood 2002). Here we find the possibility at least of a bifurcation be-
tween two design paths, between two modes of civilizational regulation, ma-
triarchal and patriarchal.
Have these tawdry fathers, with their narrow vision of innovation, robbed
us of different visions of the future? Given that their views stem from centuries-
old civilizational narratives and practices, they capture most of the political
force and media attention. Yet in between the Silicon Valleys of the world and
struggling communities, one finds all kinds of instrumentations and techno-
logical developments, including those informed by an ecological awareness of
planetary limits and global climate change. These will be crucial for a design
imagination that avoids the traps of capitalistic industrial instrumentation and
goes beyond the ontology of separation that thrives on hierarchy, competition,
aggression, and the control of humans and nature. Coming to terms anew with
“the question concerning technology” (Heidegger 1977) is indeed one of the
greatest challenges faced by any kind of critical design practice. As Clive Dil-
not (2015) puts it, we need to address head-on the exponential increase in the
destructive capacity of technology but in ways that do not cede humans’ abil-
ity to construct an entirely different set of relations with other living beings
through technology.13 To the naturalized destructiveness that has accompa-
nied the anthropocene, and faced with the emergence of the artificial as the
ineluctable mode of human life, he argues, we need to oppose the cultivation
of qualitatively new modes of becoming through the very futuring potential
offered by the artificial. Possibility here means “the negotiation with actuality
and not the escalation of what is” (Dilnot 2015, 169), as in the techno-alchemic
imaginations just mentioned. As he adds, this implies “negotiation of the pos-
sible through the artificial, just as it is also negotiation with the conditions of
natural existence” (169; emphasis added); these are crucial distinctions. This
offers the only chance to overcome “the abject capitulation to what-is [that]
is maintained by our inability to grasp what is emerging” (170). The current
conjuncture brought about by the full emergence of the artificial confronts
us with the need to think anew about the intersection of ethics, design, and
politics. We shall take up these vital questions again in the book’s conclusion.
The expansion of the artificial also challenges us to “unfold the political
capacities of design” by going against the analytical tendency in critical design
studies to examine primarily how design, through its very materiality, “hard-
wires” particular kinds of politics into bodies, spaces, or objects (Domínguez
Rubio and Fogué 2015, 143). In contrast, one might focus on design’s ability
to broaden the range of possible ways of being through our bodies, spaces,
18 Introduction
and materialities. This unfolding may be seen as based on “designers’ acquired
orientation to the pursuit of attentive and open-ended inquiry into the pos-
sibilities latent within lived material contexts” (Stewart 2015, 275). It thus be-
comes appropriate, as suggested here, to think about design’s capacities and
potentiality through a wide spectrum of imaginations—in terms of matristic
cultures with feminists; in terms of autonomy and communal modes of liv-
ing with those struggling to defend landscapes and territories worldwide;
or in terms of the artificial, with design thinkers striving to steer a course
between the prevailing defuturing practices and the futuring potential of sci-
ence and technology.
These debates signal a still-unresolved issue in social theory, and a source
of tensions and contradictions in activist worlds: the question of modernity or
modernities, including the seemingly simple question, is life better today than
it has ever been for the human majorities?, as medical advances, the rights of
women, life expectancies, communication technologies, and improvement in
livelihoods for many seem to suggest. Will there still be “modern solutions
to modern problems”? Or has modernity’s ability to even imagine the ques-
tions that need to be asked to effectively face the contemporary ecological
and social crisis been so fatally compromised, given its investment in main-
taining the worlds that created it, as to make it historically necessary to look
elsewhere, in other-than-modern world-making possibilities? But are these
other possibilities, as far as we know them (e.g., those that emerge from rela-
tional and place-based forms of living), still viable alternatives? Or have they
become, rather, historical impossibilities given their relatively small scale and
scope when compared with the globalization juggernaut? We will take up these
questions again in the conclusion.
Here, then, is the argument in a nutshell:
Introduction 19
that has progressively become dominant in patriarchal capitalist moder-
nity, on the one hand, and inquiring into existing and potential rational-
ities and modes of being that emphasize the profound relationality and
interconnectedness of all that is, on the other. This book contributes to
developing this ontological approach to design.
3 The contemporary conjuncture of widespread ecological and social
devastation summons critical thought to think actively about significant
cultural transitions. Two hopeful forms of transition thinking within
design theory and practice are arising as a result: design for transitions,
with a broad view of transition (“civilizational,” or “the great transition”);
and design for autonomy, centered on the struggles of communities and
social movements to defend their territories and worlds against the rav-
ages of neoliberal globalization. This book contributes to outlining the
fields of design for transitions and autonomous design.
4 This book, finally, seeks to contribute to design discourse through the
elaboration of the cultural background of design, at a time when designers
are rediscovering people’s ability to shape their worlds through relational
and collaborative tools and solutions. It is, however, a Latin American
contribution to the transnational conversation on design, that is, a con-
tribution that stems from contemporary Latin American epistemic and
political experiences and struggles.14
I would like to add one final caveat. This book should be read as belong-
ing to a long set of conversations in both Western philosophy and sociopoliti-
cal spaces in the West and beyond. The preoccupation with relationality and
with the limitations of binary thinking was not invented with the “ontological
turn,” needless to say; on the contrary, they have received a lot of attention in
modern philosophy, at least from the time of Immanuel Kant’s humanism and
Hegelian and Marxist dialectics, if not before. At the same time, the recent
thinking on relationality makes visible the limitations of previous approaches
to escaping dualism, particularly how far past authors were willing to push
dualism’s implications in terms of envisaging significant transformations from
the perspective of radical interdependence. There are also genuinely new em-
phases, particularly the concern with the agency of nonhumans and a certain
renewed attention to materiality. These have opened fresh paths for moving
intellectually, socially, and politically beyond dualisms and, perhaps, decolo-
nizing Western thought. To put it in Western academic terms, I would say that
this book is more anthropological Heideggerianism than deconstructive post-
20 Introduction
humanism or relentless Deleuzian deterritorialization. This is so because of its
commitment to place, the communal, and other practices of being, knowing,
and doing, and no doubt also because of its critical approach to technology
and its commitment to notions of the human capable of harboring a genuine
care for the world.
I also believe there is greater clarity today than in the recent past that the
notion of relationality involves more than nondualism; that reimagining the
human needs to go beyond the deconstruction of humanism (still the focus of
most posthumanist thought) in order to contemplate effective possibilities for
the human as a crucial political project for the present; and that to the aware-
ness of how we live in a world (or worlds) of our own making (again, a prevalent
theme in Western philosophy) we now need to add a sharper consciousness of
how those worlds make us—sometimes with deeply troubling results.
The book should thus be read as constructed along three axes: ontology,
concerned with world making from the perspective of radical interdependence
and a pluriversal imagination; design, as an ethical praxis of world making; and
politics, centered on a reconceptualization of autonomy precisely as an ex-
pression of radical interdependence, not its negation.
Introduction 21
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I
Design for
the Real World
What “Design”?
What “Real”?
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Out of the Studio
1 and into the Flow
of Socionatural Life
26 chapter One
implies a highly developed form of rationality, Kwinter considers that design
is also a vehicle for the deepest human aspirations and as such should be a
matter of widespread concern.
This chapter looks at some of the most salient critical trends in design stud-
ies and practice. It discusses recent proposals for transforming design from
an expert-driven process focused on objects and ser vices within a taken-
for-granted social and economic order toward design practices that are par-
ticipatory, socially oriented, situated, and open ended and that challenge the
business-as-usual mode of being, producing, and consuming. It highlights de-
sign frameworks that pay serious attention to questions of place, the environ-
ment, experience, politics, and the role of digital technologies in transforming
design contexts. The chapter ends with a discussion of whether a critical de-
sign studies field—one that emerges at the intersection of critical social the-
ory and design studies—can be said to exist. A main goal of the chapter is to
prepare the ground for more detailed discussions of ontological design, transi-
tion design, design for social innovation, and autonomous design, particularly
for those readers with little background in design studies. I start with an intui-
tive, but I believe analytically suggestive, entry into the nature of design.
It is often the case that highly accomplished literary works reveal essential as-
pects of human life and history with a sharpness and clarity that philosophy
and the social sciences can hardly aspire to match. Such is the case, for in-
stance, with One Hundred Years of Solitude, by Colombian writer Gabriel Gar-
cía Márquez (1970), a novel that hides unsuspected lessons about the early
phases of the deployment of technology and design in so-called traditional
societies. Let us start by recalling the book’s beginning, often considered one
of the most perfect opening paragraphs of world literature:
Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía
was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to dis-
cover ice. At that time Macondo was a village of twenty adobe houses, built
on the bank of a river of clear water that ran along a bed of polished stones,
which were white and enormous, like prehistoric eggs. The world was so
recent that many things lacked names, and in order to indicate them it
was necessary to point. Every year during the month of March a family of
But the magnet and the ice were just the beginning of what turned the pre-
modern, seemingly designless reality of the poor people of Macondo topsy-
turvy. A long paragraph at the start of a later chapter brings us up to date on
the dialectic of wonder and disappointment, enthrallment and confusion, felt
by the town’s people in response to so many modern inventions, such as elec-
tricity, the cinema, the phonograph, and the telephone. Let us listen to this
amazingly lucid summary paragraph:
28 chapter One
so human, and so full of everyday truth as a band of musicians. It was such
a serious disappointment that when phonographs became so popular that
there was one in every house they were not considered objects for amuse-
ment for adults but as something good for children to take apart. (164)
30 chapter One
being-through-practices with which our tools have much to do. Toys are us,
aren’t they?
The power of tools and design to shape being and identity is eloquently
attested by the buzz caused by the world’s fairs, from the mid-nineteenth
century till today, which became showcases for designs embodying the tech-
nological and cultural accomplishments of the age. The famous Crystal Palace
Exhibition in London in 1851 (Stocking 1987; Bürdek 2005) paraded for the
first time in a specially designed space the technologies, trinkets, and proto-
types of the day—power looms, pumps, steam engines, industrial machines.
As visitors made their way through the glass cathedral, it became clear to them
that not all peoples in the world had achieved the same level of “development,”
for there was no way the arts from “the stationary East” nor the handicrafts
from “the aborigines” could ever match the “progress” of the West. Machines,
after all, were “the measure of men” (Adas 1989). World’s fairs were not only
shrines for the collective adoration of the “civilization” and progress brought
about by the Enlightenment era but also machines for effecting what in cur-
rent Latin American critical theory is called coloniality, that is, the hierarchical
classifications of peoples in terms of race and culture.
We no longer point at things, of course, as in Macondo’s times; design gives
us their names, and in this naming we are given to them, too. We rarely think
these days about the ways in which our lives are thoroughly designed. Pre-
vious inventions constitute, too, the history of our designing—of both their
making and our being made by them. It is a sedimented, and thus invisible,
history, yet no less effective because of that. From time to time scholars re-
mind us that old technologies were once new, to paraphrase Carolyn Marvin’s
(1988) wonderfully imaginative title, and that technological development is
about “implementing the future” (Marvin 1999).4 Objects and products are
of course central to this. This is strikingly the case with all the design inno-
vations for the home space, from the mid-nineteenth-century Singer sewing
machine to the entire range of modernist innovations in the 1920s–1950s
(plywood chairs, table lamps, Bauhaus-style furniture, door handles, stackable
dishes, vacuum cleaners and washing machines, Braun toasters and kettles, cars
of course, Swedish furniture, Finnish glass, and those iconic brand objects of
Italian Bel Design, such as Olivetti typewriters and that most beautiful device
for modern mobility, the Vespa, introduced in 1946).
These are but a few of the hundreds of objects one is likely to find in lavishly
illustrated design history books. They are the stuff of design. And yet design is
much more, perhaps even more so today than in the heyday of modernism. Let
Any serious inquiry into contemporary design must be a journey into the
trials and tribulations of capitalism and modernity, from the birth of industri-
alism to cutting-edge globalization and technological development. This is of
course beyond the reach of this short book, yet some general remarks are in
order. Design has doubtlessly been a central political technology of modernity.
Regardless of where one situates the origin of design—whether with the first
use of tools by early humans, the budding technological imagination of the
Renaissance, the Industrial Revolution, or nineteenth-century modernism—
the fact remains that as an aspect of everyday life design takes off with mo-
dernity. Why? Because only with modernity, particularly after the end of the
eighteenth century, did societies become thoroughly pervaded by expert
knowledges and discourses and transformed by them. Both Jürgen Habermas
and Michel Foucault refer to this aspect of modernity, whether in terms of
the “colonization” of the lifeworld by such knowledges or the bureaucratization
and governmentalization of life by expert institutions linked to the State. What
this means is that previously taken-for-granted practices, from child rearing
and eating to self-development and of course the economy, became the object
of explicit calculation and theorization, opening the door to their designing.
This is an aspect that often escapes the attention of design critics, too mired per-
haps in design’s relation to capitalism. In short, with the development of expert
knowledge and modern institutions, social norms were sundered from the life-
world and defined heteronomously through expert-driven processes; they were
no longer generated by communities from within (ontonomy) nor through
open political processes at the local level (autonomy).5
With the full development of the Industrial Revolution in the mid-nineteenth
century, industrial design came to the fore as a field. After a period of uneasy
relations with the arts and crafts movement, which tried to counteract the as-
cendancy of “the world of machines” during the second half of the nineteenth
century, by the time modernism emerged in the twentieth century design
had become inextricably wedded to functionalism. During the first half of
the twentieth century, first with the Bauhaus and then with the Ulm school
of design, as well as design schools in other European cities, modern design
32 chapter One
articulated a new view of the intersection of art, materials, and technology at
the same time that it instilled in working people new ways of living through
the design of lived environments and the functionality of objects. Functional-
ism, however, carried the day.6 Even then, oftentimes the designers’ aim was to
improve mass-produced goods and people’s quality of life through the use of
new materials and techniques. One may see in these practices a nascent preoc-
cupation with the relation between design and politics, to be discussed fully in
the last chapter of this book.7
This also means that, from the outset, design has been inextricably tied to
decisions about the lives we live and the worlds in which we live them, even
if this awareness seldom accompanies “design as usual.” Not only design but
the academy, with its penchant for neutrality, shies away from these normative
questions: “The question we humans must face”—says Humberto Maturana,
on whom we’ll draw a lot in subsequent chapters—“is that of what do we want
to happen to us, not a question of knowledge or progress” (1997, 1). As Colom-
bian cultural critic Adolfo Albán puts it, speaking about the seemingly intrac-
table social and ecological problems facing most societies, “el problema no es de
ciencia, sino de las condiciones de la existencia” (“the problem is not one of lack
of knowledge, but of the conditions of existence”; this goes as well for sustain-
ability and climate change: far more than instrumental knowledge and techno-
logical adaption is required!).8 Today some leading critical designers are begin-
ning to tackle this issue in earnest. What world do we want to build? What kinds
of futures do people really want? (Thackara 2004; Laurel 2001; Dunne and Raby
2013). How can we strive for “a new, hopefully wiser, civilization” (Manzini 2015,
15)? These normative questions are central to ontologically oriented design.
If we start with the presupposition, striking perhaps but not totally far-
fetched, that the contemporary world can be considered a massive design fail-
ure, certainly the result of particular design decisions, is it a matter of design-
ing our way out? In an oft-quoted definition by Herbert Simon, design offers
the means to “devise courses of action aimed at changing existing conditions,
into preferred ones” (quoted in Thackara 2004, 1).9 Ezio Manzini has proposed
a variation on Simon’s formula. “Design,” he says, “is a culture and a practice
concerning how things ought to be in order to attain desired functions and
meanings” (2015, 53). Manzini’s emphasis on design’s role in meaning creation
(to be discussed at length in chapter 5) leaves no doubt that “more-of-the-
same” or “business-as-usual” approaches are not what is called for. More-of-
the-same solutions can at best lead to reducing unsustainability. The good
news, however, is that a lot of “going beyond the same” is already happening,
34 chapter One
contextual; seek to make the processes and structures that surround us intel-
ligible and knowable so as to induce ecological and systems literacy among
users; and so forth. Above all, to go back to the normative question, there is an
attempt to construct alternative cultural visions as drivers of social transforma-
tion through design.
design thinking begins with skills designers have learned over many de-
cades in their quest to match human needs with available technical re-
sources within the practical constraints of business. By integrating what is
desirable from a human point of view with what is technologically feasible
and economically viable, designers have been able to create the products
we enjoy today. Design thinking takes the next step, which is to put these
tools into the hands of people who may have never thought of themselves
as designers and apply it to a vastly greater set of problems. . . . [There is a]
difference between being a designer and thinking like a designer. (T. Brown
2009, 4)13
There isn’t much of a self-critical look here in terms of the political economy
and cultural politics of design, yet the descriptive character of the analysis—
often with a degree of ethnographic detail—is interesting in itself.
There are three topics to be touched on very briefly in what remains of this
chapter before a concluding reflection on whether a field of critical design
studies can be said to be emerging. These are architecture and urbanism,
ecological design, and the relation between design and politics. To start with
36 chapter One
architecture: there is no doubt that architecture has always been central to de-
sign, as witnessed by its role in design education and as richly exemplified by
traditions in many world regions (e.g., Italy, Finland, Catalonia in Spain, some
Latin American countries, East Asia, or cities like Chicago and San Francisco)
where architects have customarily included as part of their practice the de-
sign of furniture, fashion, music, materials, and even utopias. There is also a
sense that architecture has ceased to be a poor relative of social theory, be-
coming an important space for discussions about globalization, urbanization,
the environment, modernity, and media and digital culture; architects are
often attuned to the pressing social issues of the day, including globalization
and the anthropocene (e.g., Turpin 2013), and to the theoretical and philo-
sophical problems with which the social sciences and humanities deal (e.g.,
Sykes 2010).14 Also readily recognized by critics, however, is the fact that a
certain style of architecture has contributed to the inflation of design—a sort
of “Bilbao effect,” after Frank Gehry’s famous Guggenheim Museum in this
city. Foster contrasts this “master builder” (Gehry) with Dutch-born and New
York–based architect Rem Koolhaas, whose design writings and architectural
practice aim rather to rethink globalization from alternative architectural and
urban principles. Koolhaas’s practice is contradictory, to be sure, as reflected
in his work of cultural-architectural criticism Contents (2004), a tour de force
that combines in intricate ways deconstructive analyses, exposés, post-9/11
geopolitics, diatribes (e.g., on architecture and war), and, of course, a dazzling
and ever-proliferating and bifurcating graphic display of images, fonts, photo-
graphs, drawings, and so forth.15 For Tony Fry (2015, 87–89), however, Kool-
haas’s version of posturbanism continues to abide by the “signature architecture”
tendency that spells out the abandonment of the urban as a project and hence
the unquestioned character of the city as the locus of the unsustainable.
At the other end of the spectrum, one would be remiss to overlook pleas for
the renewal of vernacular architectural practices, for mobilizing the elements
of the earth along with those of place and culture to deal with the seemingly
intractable problems of urban poverty and environmental degradation, as
in the case of the amazing architecture of dwelling in parts of West Africa,
beautifully illustrated, described, and theorized by Jean-Paul Bourdier and
Trinh T. Minh-ha (2011). Vernacular, in these contexts, no longer indexes a
rigid traditionalism but a space of possibility that could be articulated to cre-
ative projects integrating vernacular forms, concrete places and landscapes,
ecological restoration, and environmental and digital technologies in order to
deal with serious problems of livelihood while reinvigorating communities.
38 chapter One
ground (e.g., Koolhaas) and those who continue to adhere to an existential
conception of place continues to be productive. Nobody has perhaps broached
this tension with more passion than Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa (e.g.,
2016). Influenced by his famous countryman, the architect Alvar Aalto, and
building on what is perhaps still the most profound phenomenological reflec-
tion on space and place—the inspiring The Poetics of Space, by French phi-
losopher Gaston Bachelard (1969)—Pallasmaa provides us with a thoroughly
contemporary meditation on the act of dwelling as the fundamental medium
of our being-in-the-world. Architecture, for him, has forgotten this basic fact of
existence, causing him to pen disparaging reflections on the profession. As he
argues, architects are now taught to design houses, not homes, thus contribut-
ing to the uprooting that feeds into our growing inability to genuinely connect
with the world. There is a “poetics of home”—linked to memory, emotions,
dreams, identity, and intimacy—that functional architecture and “modern liv-
ing” have foreclosed (e.g., “in the contemporary house, the fireplace has been
replaced by the tv” [35]; or, as Bachelard might say, the modern apartment
has given up on its oneiric function and is no longer capable of fostering our
dreams).
Pallasmaa draws substantial implications from this situation, including the
loss of our ability to truly imagine alternative worlds. Against architecture’s
growing instrumentalization and aestheticization, without deep roots in our
existential experience, he arrives at a conclusion that has significant design
implications. “A building is not an end in itself. A building conditions and trans-
forms the human experience of reality,” he states; “it frames, structures, articu-
lates, links, separates and unites, enables and prohibits” (96). This is because
buildings possess “a tectonic language” (97); we interact with them actively
with our entire body and senses. Partaking more of the nature of a verb (to
inhabit, to dwell) than that of a noun, “every meaningful building is at the same
time about the world, about life, and about the very discipline of architec-
ture” (98).18 Something of the sort can be found in writings about Japanese
architecture, at least in its traditional instantiations. In his book on aesthetics
and architecture, El elogio de la sombra (In Praise of Shadows, 1994), writer
Junichirō Tanizaki discusses central aspects of the materialist phenomenol-
ogy of the traditional house, from the woods, ceramic, and paper (e.g., those
wooden lattices of translucent paper that serve as doors or room dividers, the
texture of which transmits “a little warmth that recomforts the heart” [25]) to
the bathroom (“which our ancestors, who rendered every thing poetic, para-
doxically transmuted into a space of the most exquisite taste”) and, above all,
40 chapter One
nature of cities implies going beyond the model of the modernist city. Fry’s
urban design imagination provides important leads with regard to “the ques-
tion of finding futural modes of dwelling” (87). Reimagining the city along
these lines will have to be part of any transition vision and design framework.
The digitalization of so many dimensions of social life is one of the most impor-
tant social facts of the last few decades. Digital technologies and information
and communication technologies have to do with all aspects of everyday life,
and design’s role in the ever-expanding and always-changing digital territories
is one of the most poignant questions for critical design studies. Succinctly
stated, “doing digital design also means designing society, and designers ought
to take a stand as a driver of social change” (Kommonen n.d., 2). For Kari-
Hans Kommonen, a theorist at the Aalto University Media Lab in Helsinki, the
principle of digital design should be the critical awareness that “digital products
also live in the social world and change it. Digital design cannot operate out-
side its social context, because files, systems and media only gain meaning as
part of a community’s practice. Effective, meaningful design is a social activ-
ity, in which the designer is one actor among many. In addition to computers,
software, digital information and media, the materials of digital design also in-
clude communities, processes, practices and culture, and designers need to be
equipped with the right skill to deal with these elements” (1). More than tech-
nological expertise, open-source approaches and certainly the celebration of
new media is at stake.21
The democratizing potential of information and communication technolo-
gies has been exaggerated. Let us recall that the 1990s was the high decade of
things cyber. Digital technology designer Brenda Laurel’s (2001) list of “four
revolutions” usefully marks the changes in the digital field: the pc, computer
games, virtual reality and cyberspace, and of course the Internet and the web
(see also McCullough 2004). Over the past ten to fifteen years, at least in the
Anglo-American science and technology studies field, the focus on the digital
was displaced by attention to things “bio,” particularly as a result of the onto-
logical turn in social theory (see the next chapter). Social science studies of
the digital continue to be done, although perhaps with less excitement than
during the first wave; the seeming consolidation of digital technologies in so
many aspects of life (ubiquitous computing) has robbed this field of its previ-
ous glamour as a source of epistemic, social, and cultural analyses. Now the
42 chapter One
structure that Bratton refers to as the Black Stack, a hardware and software
“computational totality” that produces an accelerated geopolitics that shapes
economies as much as subjectivities, transforming the meaning of the human
by proliferating the world’s nonhuman inhabitants and users (see also Invis-
ible Committee 2015). This geopolitics/biopolitics of the digital has profound
implications for design.
Sustainability by Design?
At the other end of the spectrum from the digital, we have the concern with
the natural. Both demand equal attention from design perspectives. Since the
inception of the sustainability movement in 1987 with the publication of the
Brundtland Report, Our Common Future, where the term sustainable develop-
ment was first defined as development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs (World Commission on Environment and Development 1987), crit-
ics have pointed out that such a definition is oxymoronic in that the inter-
ests of development and the needs of nature cannot be harmonized within
any conventional model of the economy (e.g., Redclift 1987; Norgaard 1995).
Despite the moment of hope and the actual achievements at the Earth Sum-
mit held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, the contradictions and criticisms have only
multiplied through the years, peaking around the disappointing twentieth-
anniversary conference of the Earth Summit (known as Rio + 20), held in Rio
in June 2012, where the notion of the green economy was presented by gov-
ernments from the North and by international organizations as the panacea
for reaching the ever-elusive goal of sustainable development. The notion of
a green economy corroborated critics’ view that what is to be sustained with
sustainable development, more than the environment or nature, is a particular
capitalistic model of the economy and an entire dualist ontology.
We will touch on sustainability again when discussing ontological design,
but even a cursory map of design trends must include a mention of ecological
design. It took almost three decades after the publication of landscape archi-
tect Ian McHarg’s anticipatory Design with Nature (1969) for a field of ecologi-
cal design properly speaking to take off.23 Approaches range from the concep-
tual to the technocratic, with the latter predominating, particularly economic
and technological perspectives; the range among the latter category is wide,
from proposals that could be said to push the envelope in envisioning a sig-
nificant transformation of capitalism (as in the well-regarded proposal for
44 chapter One
and cultivating design intelligence becomes a key aspect of democracy based
on locality. This marriage of ecology and direct democracy manifests itself best
in bioregionalism but also in the redesign of cities to foster forms of human
habitation through which people can relocalize a range of activities in place
and community, integrated with the environment.26 Some envision a “design
process where mutualism is extended from locality to locality across conti-
nents” (Hester 2006, 61). While all this might sound a bit utopian and lacking
in self-critique, a valuable feature is that these frameworks are accompanied
by concrete examples of re/design embodying ecological design principles.
At their best, they acknowledge that unsustainability springs from the cultural
structure of modernity itself (Ehrenfeld 2009, 7, 210); modern solutions in the
form of so-called sustainable development and the green economy will not
do. John Ehrenfeld’s ontological design approach leads him to conclude that
sustainability will be brought about only if “a cultural upheaval” takes place
(211). For many ethnoterritorial social movements, sustainability involves the
defense of an entire way of life, a mode of being~knowing~doing. These are
among the most important contributions to the network of recurrent conver-
sations arising in response to the ecological crisis and attempts to redress it.
Critical design studies must embrace, at its best, the vital normative ques-
tions of the day, and they should do so from out-of-the-box perspectives. This
type of inquiry can be found in instances of engaged research at the interface
between design and activism, or where modern designs seem to break down
or become inoperative. Feminist disability scholars (e.g., Hartblay 2017) are
reframing the concept of universal design (a sort of barrier-free design for in-
dividual accessibility) in both collective and relational terms. These scholars
argue for participatory, bottom-up, situated design methods that build on a
close examination of the interrelations between differently abled bodies and
design outcomes. Thus reinterpreted, the idea of diverse bodies becomes a
stimulating epistemic and material-discursive basis for design practice. By
constructing ableism as an ontological issue, they suggest, designers might ar-
rive at a materialist ontology that is mindful of the relationality that necessar-
ily brings together bodies, spaces, environments, tools, and so forth. For this
to happen, however, a nonableist ethnography of in/accessibility is required
(e.g., of ramps, buildings, and living spaces), one that reveals the meanings and
practices of disability and its accompanying designs.27 In another revealing
We will end this chapter with a preliminary discussion of design and politics.
Is design at present inextricably tied to capitalism and a liberal conception
of politics?28 Conversely, can design be infused with a more explicit sense of
politics, even a radical politics? We already mentioned in passing the social-
ist orientation of some design pioneers during the heyday of modernism.
Climate change is, of course, pushing a wide sector of the design profession
toward ecological forms of design consciousness. Humanitarian crises are cre-
ating unprecedented spaces where capitalist production and liberal politics
no longer work, or at least not entirely, and designers are finding an unusual
46 chapter One
niche there. Some ecologically minded architects and urbanists are thinking
deeply about the relations among design, Earth, and democracy. By giving up
expert control over ser vice design in the nongovernmental organizations and
the public sector, designers, it can be argued, are exercising a kind of epistemic
politics. These are instances in which more explicit connections between de-
sign and politics are being tried out. But the vexing question of the relation
between design and the making of deeply unequal, insensitive, and destruc-
tive social orders seems to remain design’s own “wicked problem.”
This is beginning to change. Contemporary Scandinavian design has been
more successful at pairing social democratic goals and design, for instance, as
superbly analyzed in Ehn, Nilsson, and Topgaard (2014a) and by Keith Mur-
phy (2015) for the Swedish case. Their exploration of the relation between de-
sign and innovation contains a much-needed critique of the elitist notions of
culture industries and creative classes, which de facto reduce innovation to a
matter of expertise at the ser vice of capital. “There is a genuine call for innova-
tion through user-centered design, and even a belief that innovation is getting
democratized,” Ehn, Nilsson, and Topgaard claim. “At the same time, inventive
as it may seem, the new paradigm is surprisingly traditional and managerial,”
that is, oriented toward markets and profits (2014b, 3). Fostering a different
conception of innovation, for these authors, demands assiduous and commit-
ted work with marginalized publics, adapting design methods such as mak-
erspaces, fabrication labs (fab labs), and friendly hacking while exposing the
class basis of the professionals and positioning the knowledge and experience
of the subordinated groups as legitimate. This is a constructive call to take into
account in relation to all the tendencies discussed in this chapter.
Carl DiSalvo’s (2012) framework of adversarial design makes a cogent case
for approaches that broach explicitly the agonistic connection among design,
technology, democracy, policy, and society. These are important steps. Fur-
ther inroads into the design-politics relation are being made, as we shall see,
in the fields of transition design and design for social innovation. The class
and race character of design has barely begun to be tackled, for instance, by
Damian White (2015) and Elizabeth Chin (2017). As Chin unequivovally states,
there are few social spaces more unrelentingly white than the art and design
studio. For her, this unreflective whiteness in design territories is unable to
excavate the racist and sexist ideologies embedded in Bauhaus-derived aes-
thetics that constitute good design for many (2). Radicalizing design politics
will require dealing openly with these issues, situating design squarely in re-
lation to inequality, racism, sexism, and colonialism. It will also imply moving
48 chapter One
Elements for a Cultural
2
Studies of Design
Design theory and design education take place at the edges of social theory,
conventionally the province of the social science and the humanities. It thus
makes sense to affirm that the development of an ontological approach to de-
sign, one that destabilizes its comfortable niche within naturalized modern
orders, demands a recentering of design education in order to bring it fully
into the critical social theory space. As Anne-Marie Willis maintains, however,
this task entails more than a straightforward extension or application of social
theory to the design field. It is worth completing the above quote from her as
we start this chapter to convey the sense of what is at stake. Such a program
would teach on: Theories of Power, Change and the Political; Culture/
Sociality; History and Philosophy of Technology; Theories of Subjectiv-
ity, Mind/Mentalities; Theories of Making and Designing and contextual
studies (“history”) such as Modernity/Enlightenment. But of course these
subjects would not have this title; they would not be taught as conventional
Humanities courses or “complementary studies.” The challenge would be
how to make connections to design, but not in an appropriative way, reduc-
ing, decontextualizing, and hollowing out the radical nature of deep ideas,
old and new. . . . The framework for teaching from this body of knowledge
would need to be meta-designing along with an implicit, at times explicit,
critique of the design professions: “these are the historical forces that have
created the context in which design has emerged as a particular kind of
delimited practice. This is what has designed design and is still designing
design. This is what we need to understand so as to create a practice of counter-
designing.” (2015, 73; emphasis added)
50 chapter Two
Herein lies an entire program for redesigning design education (see also Fry
2017), a task to which this chapter purports to make a modest, and clearly situ-
ated, contribution. It does so from the perspective of a cultural studies of de-
sign. By this, following Lawrence Grossberg (2010), we mean the examination
of the ways in which people’s everyday lives are articulated with culture within
and through particular design practices. The cultural studies of design will also
study design’s role in the current cultural-historical conjuncture—how design
practices participate in fundamental processes of the production of reality and
their articulation with forms of power. It does so “by taking culture as its start-
ing point, its entrance into the complex balance of forces constructed out of
the even more complicated relations of culture, society, politics, economics,
everyday life, etc.” (24). Cultural studies’ radical contextuality implies its con-
nection to transformative social practices and struggles. It is, finally, about the
cultural work that needs to take place for the creation of new futures. Design
is no doubt a main player in the making of the modern onto-epistemic forma-
tion, and hence a most appropriate subject for cultural studies.1
Many of the debates and contributions sketched in the previous chapter
may be considered important contributions to the cultural studies of design.
This chapter extends this investigation by looking at a number of trends arising
from fields that, while not central to design practice or design education, nev-
ertheless have a direct bearing on the conditions within which design theory
and practice unfold, especially when one takes an ontological approach to de-
sign. These fields include anthropology, development studies, political ecol-
ogy, and feminist theory. These trends complement the discussion of elements
from the previous chapters, such as sustainability and digital culture. They are
not presented as explicit content for design education but as elements that
may enter into educational and training strategies for design schools wishing
to make forays into the ontological and transition design projects. Conversely,
students from the social sciences and the humanities might find in the notes
that follow useful ideas for bringing social theory to bear on design-related
problems, which I believe are often present in the situations in which we work.
The first, and main, part of the chapter focuses on the diverse engage-
ments between anthropology and design, alternating between the more ap-
plied or action-oriented “design anthropology” and the critical “anthropology
of design.” The second part moves on to consider recent design inroads into
the fields of development and humanitarian aid; it looks at the ways in which
designers are attempting to position themselves within development projects,
including in the rapidly growing, and distinctive, space of humanitarianism.
52 chapter Two
mately entangled with the passing of Man as the center of all knowledge and
as the measure of life. It requires no less than a new notion of the human, a
veritable posthuman understanding of what it means to be a living being in
the age of climate change, generalized unsettlement, and a growing insurrec-
tion against the defuturing effects increasingly evident in the so-called global-
ized world.
Design Anthropology
54 chapter Two
Smith 2013). This particular way of doing both anthropology and design is
yielding new methods, such as ethnographic approaches to design contexts
that make it possible to tack back and forth between action and reflection; par-
ticipatory design orientations (Ehn, Nilsson, and Topgaard 2014); political pre-
occupations, including the decolonization of design practice (Tunstall 2013);
and ethical discussions about the role of values in human-centered design.
This trend has resulted in the creation of a dynamic and growing field with
its own set of concerns that feed back into both anthropology and design. A
case in point is the notion of prototyping the social as a means to critically
look at, and construct, more inclusive worlds (A. Clarke 2011b, 11). A recent
anthropological group project looked precisely at the rise of a “prototyping
paradigm” in a variety of fields, including of course design but also art, science,
software development, and engineering. “The experimental and open-ended
qualities of prototyping,” as one of the group’s conveners hypothesized, “have
become a surrogate for new cultural experiences and processes of democ-
ratization” (Corsín Jiménez 2013, 382). By examining prototyping as an emer-
gent complex cultural practice, and by introducing a metareflection on “pro-
totyping prototyping,” this project examined critically the historicity of this
practice while highlighting the productivity of a design practice based on a
logic of experimentation, imagination, user-centeredness, and collaboration
that, they argue, could fruitfully inform anthropological work (arc Studio
2010).3 Above all, these trends suggest that, while still nascent, the coming to-
gether of design and anthropology is creating a rich arena for a rapidly devel-
oping field (Chin forthcoming; Otto and Smith 2013).
56 chapter Two
design offers insights for the explicitly activist and political transition design
and autonomous design conceptions to be developed in the context of col-
laboration with, say, indigenous communities.
58 chapter Two
of “do-gooder,” socially oriented design to address questions of social justice
and inequality—let alone to take seriously the homeless’s voices and perspec-
tives—is very limited, in these authors’ view. What the latter requires is an
epistemic “getting out of the way,” as Michael Montoya (2013) descriptively
puts it in his work on acompañamiento (accompaniment) in the planning and
design of health interventions with Latinas/os in the same part of the United
States. Chin’s and Montoya’s teamwork approaches vividly demonstrate how
difficult it is to quell sufficiently the designers’ or researchers’ own categories
so that they can even begin to understand the often-counterhegemonic cate-
gories of subaltern groups. Both researchers invoke Latin American traditions
of participatory research in this endeavor. The notion of autonomous design
to be developed in the last part of this book resonates with these projects.
Discussions of the relation between design and politics reflect the fact that
design has become a formidable political and material force; the corollary is
whether design is becoming, or can become, a promising site for the trans-
formation of the entrenched cultures of unsustainability toward pluriversal
practices. Reframing design practice ontologically is intended as a contribu-
tion to this discussion. It is also an attempt to locate design politics in its ca-
pacity to generate new entities and relations, that is, to unveil design’s capacity
“to ‘propose’ new kinds of bodies, entities and sites as political” (Domínguez
Rubio and Fogué 2015, 148), thus expanding established understandings of
the political.
60 chapter Two
lucrative contracts and the application of expertise, whereas smaller orga-
nizations are more interested in socially conscious design. Design for devel-
opment has thus become an interesting domain in which to investigate “the
afterlives of development,” as anthropologist Anke Schwittay (2014, 31) puts
it in a recent reflective piece on this trend. In her analysis of microfinance or
“financial inclusion” schemes—well known owing to the alleged success of
the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh at “empowering poor women” to become
microentrepreneurs—she shows the tensions that arise in the codesign pro-
cess; many of these stem from the fact that participation in these schemes still
functions within a colonizing politics of development knowledge. She con-
cludes, “Application of Western expertise and technology to solve the prob-
lems of development privileges outsider, technological, and often commercial
solutions over political action or indigenous practice. In this way, humanitar-
ian design constitutes a continuation of modernist development interventions
and also shows their current embrace by global market forces. However . . .
humanitarian design can begin to create alternative development figures within
the existing apparatus. It acknowledges the messiness and complexity of any
project of change and recommends proceeding with caution” (43).10
Schwittay’s caution is a wise one. To mention just two of the most recent in-
carnations of the development dream: first is the amazing machinery set in place
to discuss and agree on the set of post-2015 sustainable development indicators
after the fifteen-year Millennium Development Goals expired in 2015, with
questionable results.11 The second is the sad and, frankly, ludicrous framework
proposed by the World Bank (2013) in World Development Report 2014: Risk
and Opportunity—Managing Risk for Development. The hardworking econo-
mists at this institution have just come to the realization that what keeps poor
people in their poverty is that they have not yet learned how to manage the risks
they face, so that they can then take advantage of their opportunities! Page
after page of the report vividly describes and illustrates a world increasingly
full of risks, all of which is presented as if risks just happen, and the report then
goes on to propose schemes by which the poor can finally learn to “manag[e]
risk for a life full of opportunities” (2). It is hard to decide whether such an
amazingly simplistic approach (which nevertheless, even more sadly, influ-
ences policy worldwide) is one more proof of the World Bank’s amazing ca-
pacity for cynicism or yet another sign of its incapacity to understand power
dynamics and poor people’s lives, or both.
Caution is thus definitely in order when considering the expansion of
design into development. It is frequently the case that development design
62 chapter Two
were influential in this early pe.13 Since then, the field has remained intensely
interdisciplinary, with geography, anthropology, ecological economics, so-
ciology, and environmental history playing the most prominent roles. Since
the 1990s, poststructuralism has favored a shift in focus toward the various re-
gimes of representation and power through which nature has been culturally
constructed, historically and in place (science, patriarchy, whiteness, and co-
lonial narratives). In general terms, what came out of these two very produc-
tive phases was an understanding of pe as the field that studies the multiple
intersections among nature, culture, power, and history. Emphases oscillated
between “the social production of nature” (more prevalent in Marxist geogra-
phy) and “the cultural construction of nature” (in poststructuralist-inflected
anthropology). Ecological economics centered on reframing economic the-
ory through material-energetic analyses and questions of valuation. It became
explicitly linked with pe through its concern with environmental struggles,
chiefly in terms of what Joan Martínez-Alier (2002) calls ecological distribu-
tion conflicts (see also Healy et al. 2013; Escobar 2008). All of these inquiries
are useful for crafting the types of hybrid political ecologies appropriate to
design’s concern with enabling different socioecological futures (White 2015;
White, Rudy, and Gareau 2015).
These approaches or phases overlap today in the work of many authors;
a certain theoretical eclecticism characterizes pe. The current moment can
nevertheless be considered a distinct third phase. This phase can broadly be de-
scribed as postconstructivist and neomaterialist. While it incorporates many
of the insights of the constructivist moment (nature is historically and cultur-
ally constructed) and continues to pay attention to the social production of
nature by capital under globalizing conditions, the center of attention is now
an entire range of aspects that were largely bypassed by the social and human
sciences as a whole. The category that perhaps most aptly captures these di-
verse tendencies is the ontological turn; it has become salient in geography,
anthropology, and political theory during the past decade. What defines this
turn is the attention to a host of factors that deeply shape what we come to
know as reality but that social theory has rarely tackled—factors like objects
and things, nonhumans, matter and materiality (soil, energy, infrastructures,
weather, bytes), emotions, spirituality, feelings, and so forth. What brings
together these very disparate items is the attempt to break away from the nor-
mative divides, central to the modern regime of truth, between subject and
object, mind and body, reason and emotion, living and inanimate, human
and nonhuman, organic and inorganic, and so forth. This is why this set of
64 chapter Two
self ” of deep ecology. Something similar can be said of the potential contribu-
tions to fpe and postdualist pe by decolonial Latin American feminists, for
whom an essential part of any feminist work is the deconstruction of the colo-
nial divide (the us-versus-them divide that was introduced with the conquest
of America, slavery, and colonialism and is alive and well today with modern-
izing globalization and development; see Espinosa, Gómez, and Ochoa 2014;
Lugones 2010a, 2010b; von Werlhof 2015). Whether the concept of gender
is even applicable to preconquest societies, or even to contemporary non-
Western and nonmodern societies, remains a matter of debate, given the rela-
tional fabric that, to a greater or lesser extent, continues to characterize such
societies, which admits of no strictly separate and preconstituted categories of
masculine and feminine (Lugones 2010a, 2010b; Paredes 2012).
Of course, feminists have a strong living genealogy on which to construct
their theoretical-political projects in a “high-relationality” mode, from their
willingness to ask questions about the situatedness of knowledge, the histo-
ricity of the body, and the intersectionality of forms of oppression, to the sa-
lience of emotions and affect and the relevance of the voices of women from
the Global South. This heritage is reflected today in the feminist commitment
to and creativity in exploring other ways of worlding, including new insights
about what keeps the dominating ontologies in place. Today fpe can be said
to be a transnational practice space of understanding and healing (e.g., Har-
court and Nelson 2015; Baksh and Harcourt 2015). It builds on the realization
that attachments (to body, place, and nature) have ontological status. In some
versions, there is an explicit aim to build effective bridges across worlds by
bringing to the fore community, spirituality, and intimacy with places as ways
to repair the damage inflicted by the ontology of disconnection and oppression.
Gloria Anzaldúa’s (2002) powerful call for all of us humans to be nepantleras—
bridge builders and reweavers of relationality—is shared by some of these
new orientations. All of these feminist concerns pose challenges to design
practice and provide useful concepts for a feminist and relational rethinking
of design. One might extend Wendy Harcourt’s (2009) consistent concern
with the body politics of development to the design field in order to direct
designers’ attention to the ways in which the multiple actual or possible de-
sign/body intersections do or might play out in the kinds of worlds we end
up inhabiting.
Along with decolonial fpe, political ontology (po) examines political
strategies to defend or re-create those worlds that retain important relational
and communal dimensions, particularly from the perspective of today’s
66 chapter Two
lational territories and worlds against the ravages of large-scale extractivist
operations, such as mining and agrofuel production (but one could mention
as well the Sioux struggle against the Dakota Access Pipeline and surely other
indigenous struggles in North America). Against the ontological occupation
and destruction of worlds effected by the globalization project, po empha-
sizes the importance of thinking from, and within, those configurations of life
that, while partially connected with the globalizing worlds, are not fully oc-
cupied by them (Escobar 2014; de la Cadena 2015).
There is one more social theory framework I would like to review before shift-
ing to an explicitly applied register. This framework could prove to be par-
ticularly useful for critical and cultural design studies given that it involves a
sustained inquiry into how social change happens. This is the framework of
Epistemologies of the South (es), developed by one of the architects of the
World Social Forum, the sociologist and legal scholar Boaventura de Sousa
Santos (2014), possibly one of the most compelling and practicable proposals
for social transformation to emerge at the intersection of the Global North
and the Global South, theory and practice, and the academy and social life. It
outlines trajectories for thinking other wise, precisely because it carves a space
that enables thought to reengage with the amazing diversity of forms of knowl-
edge held by those groups whose experiences can no longer be rendered legible
by academic Eurocentric knowledge, if they ever could. Ontologically oriented
design proposals such as transition design and design for social innovation
will also find es valuable in their determination to develop non-Eurocentric
practices.
The es framework is based on a series of premises and strategies, often
effectively summarized by its author in compact and seemingly straightfor-
ward formulations—insightful reversals—which nevertheless point at crucial
problems within contemporary social theory (Santos 2007, 2014).18 Perhaps
the best starting point for our purposes is the maxim that we are facing modern
problems for which there are no longer modern solutions. Ontologically speaking,
one may say that the crisis is the crisis of a particular world or set of world-
making practices, the dominant form of Euro-modernity (capitalist, rational-
ist, liberal, secular, patriarchal, white, or what have you), or, as already men-
tioned, the oww—the world that has arrogated for itself the right to be “the”
world, subjecting all other worlds to its own terms or, worse, to nonexistence.
68 chapter Two
altern knowledges or by treating them as unable to provide the basis for other
designs and design other wise? Or by measuring productivity and efficiency
through the monocultural yardstick of market economics? Conversely, can
design practice contribute to broadening, and drawing on, the rich spectrum
of experiences that should be considered viable alternatives to what exists?
More generally, what would it entail to construct a non-Eurocentric design
imagination? What kinds of epistemic and ontological platforms would this
project require? What would it take for design practitioners to search for rep-
ertoires of design ideas from the perspective of social and cognitive justice (in-
cluding, but going beyond, the more easily detectable forms of vernacular de-
sign)? Tackling these questions might require a significant reorientation of the
rationalist and modernist cultural background from which design emerged
and within which it continues to operate.
70 chapter Two
they do not exist prior to them.20 From a capitalist perspective, transforming
them from “worthless swamp” to agroindustrial complexes is a laudable aim
(Ogden 2011). In these cases, the insatiable appetite of the oww spells out the
progressive destruction of the mangrove-world, its ontological capture and
reconversion by capital and the State (Deleuze and Guattari 1987; Escobar
2008, 2014). The oww, in short, denies the mangrove-world the possibility
of existing as such. Local struggles constitute attempts to re/establish some
degree of symmetry to the partial connections that the mangrove-worlds
maintain with the oww.
Elders and young activists in many territorial communities worldwide
passionately express why they defend their worlds even at the price of their
lives. In the words of an activist from the Afrodescendant community of La
Toma, in the Norte del Cauca region of Colombia, south of Cali, who has been
waging a courageous struggle against illegal gold mining for over five years, “It
is patently clear to us that we are confronting monsters such as transnational
corporations and the State. Yet nobody is willing to leave her/his territory;
I might get killed here, but I am not leaving.”21 Such resistance takes place
within a long history of domination and resistance, and this is essential for
understanding territorial struggles as ontological political practices and as the
background for autonomous design. La Toma communities have knowledge
of their continued presence in the territory since the first half of the seven-
teenth century. It is an instructional example of what activists call ancestral-
ity, referring to the ancestral mandate that inspires today’s struggles and that
persists in the memory of the elders, amply documented in oral traditions and
scholarly studies (Lisifrey et al. 2013). This mandate is joyfully celebrated in oral
poetry and song: Del Africa llegamos con un legado ancestral; la memoria del
mundo debemos recuperar (From Africa we arrived with an ancestral legacy;
the world’s memory we need to recuperate).22 Far from being an intransigent
attachment to the past, ancestrality stems from a living memory directly con-
nected to the ability to envision a different future—a “futurality” (Fry 2012)
that struggles for the conditions that will allow them to persevere as a distinct
world.
Back to La Toma: from November 17 to 27, 2014, a group of twenty-two
women marched from La Toma to Bogotá, a distance of 440 kilometers, to
protest the continued illegal and destructive gold mining in their territories,
despite the agreements to stop it that the government had signed from 2009
on. Many people joined in along the way or offered solidarity, in small towns
and larger cities such as Cali and Ibagué. Upon arriving at the cold Andean
72 chapter Two
A third example comes from the struggle of the indigenous Nasa and
Misak peoples, also from the Norte del Cauca region, who describe the goal
of their struggle as the Liberación de la Madre Tierra (the Liberation of Mother
Earth).25 Both groups have maintained a steady resistance to colonization from
the time of the conquest; this resistance has experienced a sharp resurgence
since the early 1970s with the creation of regional indigenous organizations.
Ever since, their strategy to recover their ancestral territories—expropriated
by sugarcane plantation barons beginning in the middle of the nineteenth
century and by other interests more recently—has met with relative success,
even if at a high cost in terms of lives lost and violent repression on the part of
the State and armed actors. The strategies and “cosmoactions” of these pueblos
(peoples) have been centered on the recovery and defense of territories and
their Planes de Vida (Life Plans). As they put it, the territory is “the vital space
that ensures our survival as a people and as a living culture in harmony with
nature and the spirits. The territory is our true history book, since it keeps alive
the traditions of those who inhabit it. As the collective space of existence, it also
makes possible the harmonious coexistence among the pueblos. It grounds the
indigenous cosmovision as the raison d’être of our survival” (Consejo Regional
Indígena del Cauca [Cric], quoted in Quijano 2012, 219). Their strategy is moti-
vated by the following principle: “to recover the land in order to recover every-
thing: authority, justice, work; this is why we need to think with our own heads,
speak our language, learn our history, and analyze and pass on our experiences
as much as those of other peoples” (257). Similarly, the Life Plan of the Misak
people is explained in terms of “the construction and reconstruction of a vital
space in which to be born, grow, persist, and flow. The Plan is a narrative of life
and survival, the construction of the path that enables the transit through life;
it is not a simple planning scheme” (Cabildo, Taitas, y Comisión de Trabajo del
Pueblo Guambiano 1994, quoted in Quijano 2012, 263).
The defense and recovery of their territories is thus actively seen and pur-
sued by these groups as the necessary means for the reconstitution of their
worlds, and involves the articulation of cultural, economic, environmental,
and spiritual processes. The Misak Life Plan “posits a type of development
based on our distinct culture and cosmovision, organized under five rubrics:
Our Territory; Our People (Mamuy misak); Culture and the Cosmovision;
Authority; and Our Customary Law (derecho mayor). These are rendered
concrete through programs along four axes: Territory, Land, and Territorial-
ity; Education and Culture; Economy (economía propia); Health and Food
Autonomy” (Cabildo Indígena Guambía 2007, quoted in Quijano 2012, 208).
is seen and felt as the existential space for the sacred and the everyday
alike, for their knowledge and customary law and the relation with other
beings, including the management of relations with other humans. . . . The
74 chapter Two
territory is comprehended in an integral fashion, as the space where the
physical and the spiritual are articulated and where all actors [human and
not] have their own unique place and set of relations. The territory is cog-
nized in terms of the interpretation of ancestral marks inscribed in long-
standing sacred sites; this perception orients present-day actions and the
integrated management of the entire territory in order to ensure its envi-
ronmental and cultural preservation. (Ulloa 2010, 81)
76 chapter Two
II
The Ontological
Reorientation
of Design
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In the Background
3
of Our Culture
80 chapter Three
what biologist Lynn Margulis and collaborators have descriptively called the
“Cartesian license” (Sagan, Margulis, and Guerrero 1997, 172), which not only
placed “man” on the highest rung of the ladder of being but led science to
investigate reality by separating mind and matter, body and soul, and life and
nonlife—what they call a kind of forgery that imagined a dead cosmos of in-
animate matter.
This is, of course, well-trodden terrain in Western philosophy. We shall see,
however, why Varela views this feature of our knowledge practices as limiting
in some fundamental ways, including for the very philosophical traditions that call
it into question. We shall also see how it shapes some of the strongest structures
of the dominant form of Euro-modernity (the belief in the individual, in the
real, in science, and in the economy as self-constituted entities). Finally, we will
discuss the extent to which the tradition is deeply connected to a determining
feature of such modernity, namely, ontological dualisms. These dualisms un-
derlie an entire structure of institutions and practices through which the oww
idea is enacted, effecting at the same time a remoteness from the worlds that
we inevitably weave with others and from the natural world, a feature that we
will locate at the basis of not only the ecological crisis but also attempts to re-
dress it, whether through relational practices of design (see the next chapter)
or political action informed by the relational and communal logics of some
social movements (chapter 6). There is thus a concrete purpose in introduc-
ing the rationalistic tradition here before tackling these other issues.
Let us start with a peculiar reading by Varela and colleagues of the Carte-
sian/rationalistic tradition: “It is because reflection in our culture has been
severed from its bodily life that the mind-body problem has become a topic
for abstract reflection. Cartesian dualism is not so much one competing solu-
tion as it is the formulation of this problem” (Varela, Thompson, and Rosch
1991, 30). As a formulation of the question of the relations among mind, body,
and experience, it is partial at best. A clear example of the shortcomings of
this approach is the standard conceptualization of cognition as the represen-
tation by a discrete mind of a preexisting, separate world (cognition as the
manipulation of symbols). For Varela and colleagues, this is fundamentally
mistaken; for them, rather than “the representation of a pregiven world by a
pregiven mind,” cognition is “the enactment of a world and a mind on the basis
of a history of the variety of actions that a being in the world performs” (9).
When you think about it, it makes perfect sense: mind is not separate from body,
and both are not separate from the world, that is, from the ceaseless and always-
changing flow of existence that constitutes life (or can you really separate them
82 chapter Three
This injunction has been anathema to the Western rationalistic tradition,
for which the world out there preexists our interactions. In the enactive ap-
proach, we are always immersed in a network of interactions that are at every
instant the result of our biological and cultural histories. We necessarily cocre-
ate the world with others (humans and nonhumans) with whom we live in co-
existence. The ultimate conclusion drawn by Maturana and Varela is no less
startling, and equally foreign to modern logocentrism: “We have only the world
that we bring forth with others, and only love helps us bring it forth” (1987, 248).
The Buddhist notion of dependent coarising, the complexity theory concept
of emergence, Maturana and Gerda Verden-Zöller’s (2008) biology of love,
and the feminist emphasis on care and love agree with this view. These are
principles of relationality. But before we go there, I’d like to briefly discuss
some other consequences of the rationalistic tradition, starting with the
individual. Four beliefs—in the individual, science, the economy, and the
real—are part of the default setting of design theory and practice as we know
it; in other words, design inevitably takes place within such an ontological
background.
84 chapter Three
sence of a self, however, does not entail placing in doubt the stability of the
world, nor the world’s regularities and coherences (more on this later). What
it means is that we also have to give up, along with the notion of a personal self,
the idea of a world that has a fixed and ultimate ground.4
Despite its emphasis on participation and interactivity, the emergent de-
sign culture that I described in the last two chapters continues to function
within a Cartesian view of the world as made up of individuals and things; this
belief shapes the notion of design agency. The hold of the individual as the de-
sign agent par excellence is beginning to loosen, however, and the newer ten-
dencies aim to find a balance between disembedded and relational understand-
ings of the person. Two particular notions can be credited for this important
change. The first is the idea that design takes place today in systems of distrib-
uted agency, power, and expertise, within which it is becoming more difficult
to maintain the fiction of the isolated individual, and even that of the designer
genius at work in the studio. Closely related are the notions of codesign and
dialogic collaboration, through which designers and common folk alike “re-
discover the power of doing things together” (Manzini 2015, 24). The reawak-
ening of things local and communal fits into this changing landscape of design
conditions. Echoing Ivan Illich’s critique of the disabling nature of modern
technologies, Ezio Manzini finds in the growing desire to abandon individu-
alistic lifestyles a hopeful condition for collaborative design (94–98). From
the design world, then, there is also relational pressure being exerted on that
most recalcitrant of modern constructs, the so-called individual. More, how-
ever, is needed before relational personhood can become the default setting
in a postindividualist world. This takes us into the second strong structure of
modernity, the belief in the real.
As he hastens to say, what is involved here is not a matter of beliefs (or, worse,
the assumption that our Western view is the truth, since it is validated by sci-
ence, whereas theirs is just a belief) but a matter of reals. The question for
design remains, what would it take for designers to operate without a purely
86 chapter Three
objectivist and single vision of the real? To embrace the notion that design
practices, too, might contribute to creating multiple notions of out-thereness,
rather than a single one? And, moreover, to take seriously the view that reality
is an ongoing and continuous flow of forms and intensities of all kinds? We
will get back to these questions in our discussion of the relational ontologies
mobilized in territorial struggles in Latin America.
Nobody within the Anglo-American academy has crafted a view as counter
to the ontology of the oww as Tim Ingold (2000, 2011). In this anthropolo-
gist’s view, the world is anything but static and inanimate, not an inert con-
tainer. It is rather a meshwork made up of interwoven threads or lines, always
in movement. As much as any other living being, humans are immersed in this
meshwork. Drawing insights from animist cultures and philosophies, Ingold
(like some transition visionaries and biologists and many indigenous and spiri-
tual teachers) arrives at the idea of a sentient universe. The resulting framework
cannot but be deeply relational; a sentient universe is one in which “it is the
dynamic transformative potential of the entire field of relations within which
beings of all kinds . . . continuously and reciprocally bring one another into ex-
istence” (2011, 68). To sum up, “things are their relations” (74; see also Strathern
1991). It should be clear that in such a vision of the world it is practically impossi-
ble to demarcate a single, stable real.5 To be able to do so, one has to parcel out en-
tire domains of the meshwork as inanimate; this is precisely one of the modern
operations par excellence; indeed, moderns imagine the world as an inanimate
surface to be occupied; for many relational cultures, on the contrary, humans and
other beings inhabit a world that is alive.6 While moderns occupy space, non-
moderns dwell in places by moving along the lines and threads that produce
the place. It is instructive to quote again from Ingold to dispel once and for all
the oww idea: “Rather than thinking of ourselves only as observers, picking our
way around the objects lying about on the ground of a ready-formed world, we
must imagine ourselves in the first place as participants, each immersed with
the whole of our being in the currents of a world-in-formation: in the sunlight
we see, the rain we hear and the wind we feel in. Participation is not opposed to
observation but is a condition for it, just as light is a condition for seeing things,
sound for hearing them, and feeling for touching them” (2011, 129).
One of the most cogent instantiations of this idea was actually developed
in the late 1960s and early 1970s by scholars who started to conceptualize the
circularity between observer and observed within what came to be known as
second-order cybernetics (or the cybernetics of observing systems). Going
88 chapter Three
Such is the case with what in my mind is one of the most enlightening set
of critiques of modern science, namely, that produced somewhat collectively
by a group of South Asian cultural critics who offer brilliant examples of the
dissenting imagination.8 Investigating the effects of science in third-world
contexts, as the work of these intellectuals shows, provides for a very dif-
ferent reading of science, one that, while acknowledging that metropolitan
science might have been associated historically with dissent, demonstrates
that not only has this ceased to be the case but science has become the most
central political technology of authoritarianism, irrationality, and oppres-
sion of peoples and nature. As a reason of state, science operates as the most
effective idiom of violent development and even standardizes the formats
of dissent. In the face of this, the semiarticulate protests of the subaltern
rise, at times becoming creative assessments of Western knowledge, less-
ening science’s hegemony and keeping alive a plurality of consciousnesses.
Of par ticular interest for our concern with relationality and design is the
argument that, by splitting cognition and affect and ideas from feelings, in
the interest of objectivity, science contributes to heightening modernity’s
tendency toward pathologies of isolation and violence, enabling scientists to
get credit for constructive discoveries while avoiding responsibility for the
destructive ones.
Organized science thus becomes ineffective as an ally against authoritari-
anism and increasingly dependent on market-based vested interests. This
motivates the powerful and perhaps startling indictment, by Ashis Nandy,
that “of all the utopias which threaten to totalize the human consciousness,
the most seductive in our times has been the one produced by modern science
and technology” (1987, 10). In this way, science loses sight of its potential
role in the search for nonoppressive forms of culture and society. It can-
not even enter into dialogue with other forms of knowledge given its de
facto claim to have the monopoly on knowledge, compassion, and ethics.
Awareness of this epistemic politics that characterizes mainstream science
becomes a required element when designers and others are working with
marginalized groups.
90 chapter Three
fundamentalism. It would take a relatively profound ontological transforma-
tion on our part to alter this default setting at the individual, let alone collective,
level. Said other wise, the notions of the individual, the real, and the economy
as having intrinsic existence by themselves, independent of the relations that
constitute them, and of us as observers, are instances of “folk essentialism,” as
Kriti Sharma (2015, 12) wonderfully puts it. They seem to us completely real,
yet they depend on an entire complex set of operations. It is precisely this
impression of reality that we need to probe more deeply to arrive at a view of
their ineluctable contingency.
Whereas science imposes its criteria of rationality and objectivity on all
forms of knowledge, supported by a Euclidean view of independent reality an-
chored materially in space and time, economics performs a related operation
by taking the sphere of production out of the flow of socionatural life, and tech-
nology sediments this ontology with its nonconvivial, industrial instrumen-
tations. Humans, finally, learn how to operate like individuals by construing
themselves as raw materials for endless improvement (“self-alchemization”
in Claudia von Werlhof ’s [2015] terms). It is thus that within modern patri-
archal capitalist societies we learn from childhood to prioritize production
and consumption (at the expense of other manners of valuing existence),
individual success (instead of collective well-being), orientation toward the
future (instead of mindfulness to the present and dwelling in the hic et nunc of
quotidian existence), and the subordination of spirituality and the awareness
of the unity of all that exists to the materialism of commodities, of being to
possessing. All of this has the cost of making us see ourselves as separate and
distant from nature and others (whether in terms of gender, race, culture, or
what have you), thus bracketing, if not denying, their coexistence in a relation
of mutual respect.
It is this onto-epistemic formation in which we are enmeshed, largely with-
out our knowing it. This, too, is the meaning of our ontological commitment to
“being modern.” The question we need to ask, in ever more refined and enabling
ways, is whether it is possible to imagine other forms of knowing~being~doing
without losing our ability to navigate skillfully the meanderings of the mod-
ern constellation structured by the four beliefs so sketchily analyzed. Pursuing
this goal implies significant ontological work on our part. We cannot place this
entire historical circumstance at the doorstep of the rationalistic tradition, of
course, but the process is deeply intertwined with that rationality and its as-
sociated ontology. To this topic we dedicate the next section.
92 chapter Three
amply corroborated by the ethnographic literature on myths and rituals (of
creation, for instance). It also exists in the narratives that we moderns tell our-
selves about ourselves, which are repeated over and over by politicians in their
speeches or, invariably, in the six o’clock news’ rendition of “what is happening
in the world.” This “what is happening” invariably refers back to the ontologi-
cal ensemble of the individual, the real, science, and the market, that is, to the
fact that we see ourselves as self-sufficient subjects confronting an “external world”
made up of preexisting, self-standing objects that we can manipulate at will, or at
least hope to. In short, what cnn or the bbc reports on, from an ontological
perspective, is the status of this ensemble, including threats to it, though these
are invariably explained in terms of the same categories, never allowed to drift
too far out into other cultural worlds.
This argument holds for all areas of social life; for instance, the divide mod-
erns make between nature and culture, which entails seeing nature as inert,
informs the agroindustrial model of agriculture that from the time of slave
plantations and “scientific forestry” in Germany in the eighteenth century to
today’s transgenic seeds, pushed by agribusiness corporations, has become
dominant in many parts of the world. From a relational ontology, something
like a plantation of a single crop produced for profit and the market does not
make any sense. On the contrary, relational ontologies are performed into cul-
tivation practices more akin to what peasants have traditionally done (mul-
ticropping, with production for subsistence as well as the market; a diverse
landscape, with links to communities and gods, etc.), or to the kinds of local-
ized, organic, resilient, and democratic agricultural systems that today’s agro-
ecologists propose as the way out of the food crisis. But this is getting ahead
of the story of relationality, and it is time to say something more general about
dualism before moving on to the next section.
A number of authors emphasize three fundamental dualisms in what I
have referred to here as the dominant form of Euro-modernity: the divide be-
tween nature and culture, between us and them (or the West and the Rest,
the moderns and the nonmoderns, the civilized and the savages, etc.), and
between subject and object (or mind/body dualism) Latour’s (1993) charac-
terization of the first two divides as central to the constitution of modernity is
well known. Blaser (2010) adds that the second divide is in turn essential to the
making and functioning of the first and refers to it as “the colonial divide.” This
is not the place to trace the genealogy of these divides; suffice it to mention that
ecologists and feminists place emphasis on the mind/body, culture/nature, and
man/woman divides as foundational to patriarchal cultures, reductionist forms
94 chapter Three
ecological crisis of reason. For her, the ecological crisis is a crisis “of what the
dominant culture has made of reason” (2002, 5). This form of rationality, which
claims mastery over nature, relies on multiple “centrisms” (anthropocentrism,
self-centrism, Eurocentrism, androcentrism) and has produced, in the age of
global markets, “ratiogenic monsters.” Blind to our ecological embeddness,
this reason-centered culture supports elite forms of power, strengthens the
illusion of the autonomous individual, and idolizes an economic rationalism
that ingrains masculinity and invisibilizes the agency of nonhumans and sub-
ordinated groups. Rather than relying on “the same elite culture and develop-
mentalist rationality that led us into the mess” (16) in the first place—in other
words, rather than intensifying the same reason-centered culture, as solutions
such as the purported green economy do—her advocacy is for a form of non-
dualist, noncolonialist rationality that resituates human practice within ecol-
ogy, and nonhumans within an ethics of respect and responsibility (see also
Leff 2002, 2015, for a related argument and proposal).
The second observation is that these three salient dualisms work them-
selves out into a whole series of other divides, including the following (not an
exhaustive list): human and nonhuman, live (life/organic) and inert (matter/
inorganic), reason and emotion, ideas and feelings, the real and its repre-
sentations, the secular and the sacred or spiritual, what is alive and what
is dead, the individual and the collective, science (rationality, universal-
ity) and nonscience (belief, faith, irrationality, culturally specific knowledge),
facts and values, form and content, developed and underdeveloped. In both ac-
ademic and activist worlds, we are witnessing a renewed interest in the subor-
dinated side of the dualisms across an entire spectrum of their manifestations, a
sort of return of the repressed sides of the pairs as important dimensions of what
constitutes life itself—for example, growing attention to emotions, feelings, the
spiritual, matter, nonscientific knowledges, body and place, nonhumans, non-
organic life, death, and so forth. Taken together, the recent emphases can be
seen as mapping an emerging ontological-political field with the potential to
reorient cultural and social practice in ways that clearly foster the intersecting
goals of ecological sustainability, social justice, and pluriversality.
96 chapter Three
seen as questioning the modern social theory episteme. If one takes this epis-
teme to be structured by a few major practices, the question becomes whether
the emergent tendencies are capable of unsettling this epistemic space in more
significant ways than has been the case with critical theories so far, or whether
they rather continue to function within it.15 Generally speaking, the recent
approaches aim to go beyond an ontology and epistemology of subjects and
objects and point at the shortcomings of a politics derived from such a dualist
understanding. There is, then, much to learn from them. By focusing on the
repressed side of the dualisms, they move at the edges of the Western social
theory table (in the Foucauldian sense), yet one may wonder whether, by
continuing to appeal to a logocentric understanding, they remain trapped
within the table. To explore this question, I return briefly to Varela’s argument
about the shortcomings of rationalistic styles of thought.
For science writer Dorion Sagan, modern approaches to the social and natural
sciences have “block[ed] out most of the world” (2011); hence, what we are
witnessing in the turn to animal, nonhuman, more-than-human, and posthu-
man studies is the return of all those unacknowledged aspects of the living
that make life possible. In responding to Sagan from the perspective of Vine
Deloria’s “American Indian metaphysics,” Kimberly TallBear (2011) argues
that some of these trends and categories still endow nonhumans with human-
like biographical and political lives that assume somewhat independent stand-
points and, above all, that they are still inadequate to describe all relations
among beings. She also pushes us to think about the ways in which some of
the cutting-edge trends reproduce some of the modern binaries, including that
of life and nonlife, resulting in the exclusion of, say, stones, trees, or thunder
from being effective forces in the world, and even perhaps having sentience
(on pansentience, see also Rose 2008; Goodwin 2007). Despite their efforts,
do the recent tendencies continue to uphold in some fashion an intramodern
(largely Euro-American) understanding of the world (as decolonial theorists
might argue)? Do they continue to function within a much-renewed, but still
primarily Western/modern, episteme?16
As a provisional hypothesis, I argue that the reliance on long-standing forms
of rationality and logocentric analysis remains central to critical academic pro-
duction (this book included!) and that, despite its remarkable productivity,
it has consequences for finding our way beyond the dominance of dualist
98 chapter Three
dominance and a displacement of its centrality in the design of the world and
our lives. This is done in the name of reorienting the rationalistic tradition
(Winograd and Flores 1986); fostering embodied, situated forms of reflection
(e.g., Varela, Thompson, and Rosch 1991); imagining nondualist forms of ratio-
nality that enable us to resituate humans within an ecological understanding
of life (e.g., Plumwood 2002; Leff 2015); arriving at decolonial and genuinely
intercultural modes of knowledge production (decolonial theory; see, e.g.,
Walsh 2009); or moving toward convivial societies where nonconvivial tools
have a role to play but do not dominate (Illich 1973). In doing so, these au-
thors are moved by two aims: the first is to point out the consequences of the
dualisms, especially how disconnected we normally are from many aspects of
everyday existence; the second, perhaps more crucial for this book, is to argue
that the practice of transformation really takes place in the process of enacting
other worlds/practices—that is, in changing radically the ways in which we
encounter things and people, not just theorizing about such practice (e.g., Spi-
nosa, Flores, and Dreyfus 1997, 165). In these proposals we find clues toward
this path, whether the renovated practice is Buddhist, ecological, political, de-
colonial, or a reimagined design approach. Let us listen to two final statements
on the first aspect before concluding with a brief discussion of relationality.
The New Zealand environmentalist Deborah Bird Rose has powerfully
stated the case against dualisms; Western dualisms, she says, sustain “a feed-
back loop of increasing disconnection. Our connections with the world out-
side of self are less and less evident to us, and more and more difficult to sustain
and to experience as real” (2008, 162).19 A certain derealization parallels the
desacralization that follows from dualist rationality. “If life is always in con-
nection, and if those connections are being destroyed, as they are these days at
an enormous rate, what becomes of the remaining of life?” (166). Nandy (1987,
102–109) underscores the effect of organized science in fueling “the human
capacity to isolate” and fostering affectless forms of “sanitized cognition” at
both the individual and collective levels. All cultures, in his view, however,
find means to respond to the pathologies of isolation, to de-isolate themselves
in various ways, including through religion. In pondering the construction of
nonoppressive societies in ways that do not render them newly oppressive
orders themselves, Nandy insists on the need to take into account the “visions
of the weak” and their notions of a good society and a desirable world. For
Nandy, this has to be done by bearing in mind that “their apparent inability
to withstand analytical thought, and their defensiveness and diffidence in the
face of Cartesian categories—all contribute to their undervaluation” (18).
Do you know the average person spends four years of his life looking down at
a cell phone? Kind of ironic, ain’t it? How these touch-screens can make us
lose touch.
With so many iMacs, iPads, and iPhones, so many “i”s, so many selfies
Not enough “us”s and “we”s
See, technology has made us more selfish and separate than ever
’Cause while it claims to connect us, connection has gotten no better . . .
Reclassify Facebook for what it is, an antisocial network . . .
We sit at home on our computers measuring self-worth
in terms of numbers of followers and likes . . .
What about me? Do we not have the patience to have a cnvrstn without
abbrvtn?
This is the generation of media over stimulation
Chats have become reduced to snaps, the news is 140 characters, videos of six
seconds at high speed, and you wonder why add [attention deficit disorder]
is on the rise faster than 4g lte . . .
This one, my friends, we cannot autocorrect, we must do it ourselves.
Take control or be controlled, Make a decision . . .
I am so tired of conforming . . . to this accepted form of digital insanity . . .
I imagine a world where we smile when we have low batteries,
’Cause that will mean we’ll be one bar closer—to humanity.
Let me reassure you at the outset that it is not a question of being for or
against technology, or even of settling the score on the alleged battle between
tradition and modernity, but rather of bringing to the fore the diversity of ex-
istential options open to us humans, the multiple ways of being in space/place
and time, and of what technologies do to the Earth and to our communities.
Prince Ea’s slow, carefully worded rapping makes us aware of the anthropo-
logical narrowing of existential choices fostered by things digital, paradoxically
in the name of freedom, the carefully regulated freedom of neoliberal self-
improvement schemes, of the seductive “Be All You Can Be” slogan, which
translates as “maximize your interactions, your connectivity, the information
you upload into your devices so as to download it again when useful.” But it
is in so striving to be free that we are, paradoxically, most programmed, most
Why should design be considered “ontological”? The initial answer to this ques-
tion is straightforward: “We encounter the deep question of design when we
recognize that in designing tools we are designing ways of being” (Winograd
and Flores 1986, xi). Understood as “the interaction between understanding
and creation” (4), design is ontological in that it is a conversation about pos-
sibilities. One more way to get at the ontological dimension of design is by ad-
dressing “the broader question of how a society engenders inventions whose
existence in turn alters that society” (4–5). Digital technologies are of course
dramatic cases of radical innovations that opened up unprecedented domains
of possibilities (as were printing, the automobile, and television earlier); they
transformed an entire set of daily practices. Thus, every tool or technology is
ontological in the sense that, however humbly or minutely, it inaugurates a set
of rituals, ways of doing, and modes of being (Escobar 1994). It contributes to
shaping what it is to be human.
A second sense in which design is ontological, already hinted at by Wino-
grad and Flores, is that, in designing tools, we (humans) design the conditions
of our existence and, in turn, the conditions of our designing. We design tools,
and these tools design us back. “Design designs” is the apt and short formula
given to this circularity by Anne-Marie Willis; “we design our world, while our
world acts back on us and designs us” (2006, 80). This applies to the entire range
It should be stressed that, as for Varela, for Winograd and Flores the entire
process is deeply practice oriented. Sensing and holding on to a disharmony
in one’s disclosive space is not effectively achieved by stepping back from the
“In ontological designing,” to quote them one final time, “we are doing more
than asking what can be built. We are engaging in a philosophical discourse
about the self—about what we can do and what can be. Tools are fundamental
to action, and through our actions we generate the world. The transformation
we are concerned with is not a technical one, but a continuing evolution of
how we understand our surroundings and ourselves—of how we continue
becoming the beings we are” (179; emphasis added). In subsequent chapters
we will prod this perspective into a nondualist path by focusing explicitly on
the communal and pondering how to transition beyond the rationalistic tra-
dition whose pervasiveness Winograd and Flores do so much to unconceal.
Most people would intuitively reject the idea that we humans, too, are designed
in some fashion. Yet this is one of the most direct and consequential lessons
of the ontological approach to design. To paraphrase, in modern societies we
design ourselves, although not under conditions of our own choosing. From
the resulting allegedly universal but specifically modern notion of the human
now emerges the imperative to transcend its anthropocentric, androcentric,
and rationalistic foundations, which has yielded an entire spectrum of post-
humanist approaches, some of which were discussed at the end of chapter 2.
Fry’s design ontology (Fry 2011, 2012, 2015; Fry, Dilnot, and Stewart 2015)
can be considered a special case within the posthumanist landscape, for sev-
eral reasons: first, it is to my knowledge the first and only approach to system-
atically link posthumanism and design; and, second, concomitantly, it makes
a decided effort at crafting a posthumanist notion of the human, one that
tackles systematically the consequences of living under structured unsustain-
ability as a civilizational condition. What, Fry asks, “has been lost in the rise
of the hegemonic category ‘the human’?” (2012, 12). Fry reminds us that the
human is the result of three great forces: natural selection, self-organization,
and design.9 This evolutionary view allows Fry to signal the uniqueness of the
leap toward unsustainability entailed by modernity. This is a third important
feature of the work of Fry and his collaborators, namely, their willingness to
imagine beyond modernity, and to do so decolonially, that is, with a profound
awareness that one of the most important design consequences of modernity
has been the systematic suppression, and not infrequently destruction, of
nonmodern worlds. “Writ large,” Fry states, “[modernity] did not just take
the future away from the peoples it damaged and exploited but set a process in
motion that negated the future, and defutured both the born and the unborn”
(2015, 23). Thinking decolonially indicates a critique of the notion of a world
made of One World and, conversely, upholds the notion that “while the planet
is singular, world is plural—for it is formed and seen in difference—as are we”
(21). The sensitivity to difference is crucial here, since it refers to the pluriverse
and contributes to the argument that what needs to be sustained is precisely
the pluriverse.10
For Fry, one of the most serious effects of modernity is what he calls de-
futuring, understood as the systematic destruction of possible futures by the
structured unsustainability of modernity. Futuring, in contrast, is intended to
convey the opposite: a future with futures. The tension between defuturing
The world modern humans have created is “deworlding” under the pressures
of globalized capitalism, population, and technology. The project of “reworld-
ing” is thus necessarily ontological in that it involves eliminating or redesign-
ing not just structures, technologies, and institutions but our very ways of
thinking and being (Illich 1973). Perhaps one of the most daring, and puz-
zling, aspects of this task is Fry’s unapologetic call for redesigning the human.
The practical aspects of rethinking urban design and adaptation are huge
and encompass all dimensions of the space and time of the city; Fry explores
them at length in City Futures in the Age of a Changing Climate (2015).11
Learning how to dwell in another way will bring with it a sharper recognition
of what we (modern humans) actually are, so that we can be other wise. Fry
maps an entire cultural-political project that involves “embracing the onto-
logical status of the city assemblage as post-natural environments of differ-
ence together with regimes of ordering and disordering (the formal and the
informal, the informational and metabolic, the industrial and post-industrial,
the spectacular and hidden). . . . It follows that a very different view of post-
urbanism is now to be put forward here” (88), one that makes possible fu-
tural modes of dwelling.
This is a good point to bring back the question of sustainability, this time from
an explicitly ontological perspective. Imbued with the major tenets of Heideg-
gerian phenomenology and Maturana’s biology, a recent approach to sustain-
ability by John Ehrenfeld develops an ontological framework for ecological
design.12 Ehrenfeld (2009) starts by arguing that current proposals will at best
amount to reducing unsustainability rather than creating true sustainability.
For the latter to happen, a veritable reinvention of the collective structures
that shape our lives and that define our humanness is required. Briefly, in
Ehrenfeld’s diagnosis, unsustainability springs from the cultural structure of
modernity itself. Moreover, approaches intended to deal with environmental
problems are based on a reductionist definition of the problem that in turn
stems from the narrow understanding of reality, rationality, and technology
inherited from the Cartesian tradition. This is causing tremendous break-
downs in not only ecological but also social life, which the author interprets in
terms of addiction to consumption. From here he goes on to propose a frame-
work for the redesign of tools, physical infrastructure, and social institutions
as a means to foster changes in consciousness and practices based on an ontol-
ogy of care. The framework revisits the intersection of three domains—the
human, the natural, and the ethical—as the space for an alternative approach
to sustainability.
From these initial steps follows the definition of sustainability as “the possibil-
ity that humans and other life will flourish on the planet forever” (Ehrenfeld 2009,
53; italics in the original). In this vision, flourishing, following various philo-
sophical and spiritual sources, “is the most basic foundation of human striv-
ing and, if properly articulated, can be the strongest possible driver towards
sustainability” (53). Flourishing, he goes on to propose, can be brought about
only by shifting to a design mode that is effective at dealing with the culture of
unsustainability—in other words, the way out can be no other than sustain-
ability by design (76–77). This is one of Ehrenfeld’s stronger contentions, the
second being that what needs to be transformed first and foremost, given their
overwhelming power, are the economic and technological domains that sus-
tain the modern ontology. This does not mean that the key to sustainability is
to be found in scientific breakthroughs or techno-fixes but rather that “the key
to sustainability is the practical truths that each of us discovers in our daily life
and that contribute to the collective activities of our culture” (95).
None of the ontological design approaches discussed so far are very clear
about the agency behind the reenvisioned design, and a more satisfactory
discussion of this thorny issue will have to await the discussion of transition
design and autonomous design, where there is a more explicit sense of agency.
While the idea that everybody designs is taken seriously, the proponents of
ontological design seem to reserve a special role for a kind of designer who has
the necessary disposition and training to carry the ontological undesigning/
redesigning project forward. Thinking about agency ontologically calls for
a more nuanced understanding of “use,” which Mark Titmarsh and Tonkin-
wise (2013) explore through a reinterpretation of the interrelations between
art and design. The roles of research, technology, and the studio as well as
the political economy of unsustainability are the subject of much debate from
the perspective of the ontological framing, yet the agent who is carrying out
these practices remains elusive. Fry comes close in his discussion of the types
of people who will emerge in the wake of the radical changes brought about
by unsustainability, defuturing, and unsettlement, and of course not all the
characters he envisions in his posthuman fiction will play a constructive role
toward Sustainment. How the “worldly rematerialization” capable of “enabling
the ‘being-otherwise’ of these [new] beings” will take place is not explicitly
discussed (Fry 2012, 208).14
The understanding of agency in contemporary theory has been trans-
formed dramatically as a result of the ontological turn. With the arrival of
objects, things, nonhumans, spirits, and so forth into theory’s orbit, the ex-
In the third lecture in Ethical Know-How (1999), Varela deals with the absence
of a self as we know it in the West, proposing the notion of a selfless or virtual
self as an emergent property of a distributed system mediated by social inter-
actions (52–63). For Varela, a key question arising from both of these concep-
tualizations is whether we can learn to embody the empty self, that is, to really
develop a practical way to go beyond the assumption of the self-interested
autonomous individual and the businesslike and ego-clinging features it com-
mands.16 This is what the Buddhist mindfulness tradition is all about; it aims
to provide a means to nonduality as well as principles for groundlessness as
compassion. This is not the place to discuss further the Buddhist part of Va-
The time has come for us to restore some of the categories used by the
victims themselves to understand the violence, injustice and indignity
to which they have been subjected in our times. . . . These neglected cat-
egories provide a vital clue to the repressed intellectual self of our world,
particularly to that part which is trying to keep alive the visions of a more
democratic and less expropriatory mode of living. To that other self of the
world of knowledge, modernity is neither the end-state of all cultures nor
the final word in institutional creativity. Howsoever formidable and per-
manent the edifice of the modern world may appear today, that other self
recognizes, one day there will have to be post-modern societies and a post-
modern consciousness, and those societies and that consciousness may
choose to build not so much upon modernity as on the traditions of the
non-modern or pre-modern world. (1987, xvii)
One could interpret Nandy’s discussion as speaking about the futuring pos-
sibilities embedded within, and often articulated by, the most direct victims
of modern defuturing. It is important to restate, however, that Nandy is not
advocating for an intransigent defense of tradition. His reworking of the con-
cepts of tradition and modernity is much more sophisticated than that; be-
sides, he is interested first and foremost in the dialogue among cultures. Most
movements in the South are not interested in a recalcitrant defense of tradi-
tions either, even if advocates of modernity on all ends of the political spec-
trum continue to corner them into such a slot in the name of one or another
universalism or dualism. Nandy acknowledges the importance of excavating
and fighting for a lost or repressed West (just as I have spoken of alternative
Wests that might constitute sources of nondualist ontologies). Perhaps the
As a Way of Concluding
We shall revisit some of these features at the very end of this book, particularly
after the discussion of autonomous design and the concept of the communal.
For now, it is fitting to end this chapter with the following plea by Tonkinwise:
“So we, especially we designers, must become much more steeped in onto-
logical accounts of what design means, and what the human that is designed
and so designs, is and can be” ( [2014?], 7). Herein lies a constructive program
for ontological design.
Designs for
the Pluriverse
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5 Design for Transitions
The formulation of transition imaginaries has been taking place for several
decades, as exemplified by Ivan Illich’s (1973) argument for a transition from
industrial to convivial societies. However, it has intensified during the past de-
cade. In fact, the forceful emergence of transition narratives, imaginaries, and
proposals in multiple sites of academic and activist life over the past decade is
one of the most anticipatory signs of our times. Transition discourses (tds)
take as their point of departure the notion that the contemporary ecological
and social crises are inseparable from the model of social life that has become
dominant over the past few centuries, whether categorized as industrialism,
capitalism, modernity, (neo)liberalism, anthropocentrism, rationalism, patri-
archy, secularism, or Judeo-Christian civilization. Shared by most tds is the
contention that we need to step outside existing institutional and epistemic
boundaries if we truly want to strive for worlds and practices capable of bring-
ing about the significant transformations seen as needed.
While talk of crises and transitions has a long genealogy in the West, tds
are emerging today with particular richness, diversity, and intensity. Nota-
bly, as even a cursory mapping of tds would suggest, those writing on the
subject are not limited to the academy; in fact, the most visionary td think-
ers are located outside of it, even if they often engage with critical academic
currents. At present, tds are emerging from a multiplicity of sites, includ-
ing social movements and some nongovernmental organizations, the work
of intellectuals with significant connections to environmental and cultural
struggles, and that of intellectuals within alternative or dissenting scholarly
traditions; tds are prominent in the fields of culture, ecology, religion and
spirituality, alternative science, food and energy, social movements research,
and digital technologies.1
Thomas Berry explains the search for transitions in the following way: “We
are in between stories. The old story, the account of how the world came to be
and how we fit into it, is no longer effective. Yet we have not learned the new
story” (1988, 123). The search for a new story (or rather new stories) is on;
he puts it most pointedly and comprehensively: “We must describe the chal-
lenge before us by the following sentence: The historical mission of our time
is to reinvent the human—at the species level, with critical reflection, with
the community of life systems, in a time-developmental context, by means of
story and shared dream experience” (1999, 159). This is a compelling mandate
for all humans, and certainly for ontologically minded designers.
The global transition has begun—a planetary society will take shape over
the coming decades. But its outcome is in question. . . . Depending on how
environmental and social conflicts are resolved, global development can
branch into dramatically different pathways. On the dark side, it is all too
easy to envision a dismal future of impoverished people, cultures and nature.
Indeed, to many, this ominous possibility seems the most likely. But it is
not inevitable. Humanity has the power to foresee, to choose and to act.
While it may seem improbable, a transition to a future of enriched lives,
human solidarity and a healthy planet is possible. (Raskin et al. 2002, ix)
Common to many tds, exemplified by the above quote from Raskin and
colleagues, is the view that humanity is entering a planetary phase of civiliza-
tion as a result of the accelerating expansion of the modern era, that a global
system is taking shape with fundamental differences from previous historical
phases. The character of the transition will depend on which worldview pre-
vails. The Great Transition Initiative distinguishes among three worldviews—
The Transition Town Initiative (tti), started in the town of Totnes in south-
ern England and spearheaded by Rob Hopkins, is a main source of inspira-
tion for the transition design framework developed at cmu, to be discussed
shortly. Taken together, the tti, degrowth, and the commons may be seen
as constituting a somewhat unified space for the further development of the
theory and practice of transition design. In the next section, I will propose a
There is likely no other social and policy domain where the paradigm of
growth has been most persistently deployed than that of development.
Development continues to be one of the main discourses and institutional
apparatuses structuring unsustainability and defuturing. It is crucial for
transition designers to resist the intellectual and emotional force of this imagi-
nary, even more so now when the “international community” (a self-serving
and self-appointed elite group intent on keeping the world going without
major changes) is gearing itself up for fifteen more years of bland and dam-
aging policy prescriptions in the name of so-called sustainable development.
The golden age of development was the decades from the 1950s to the end
of the 1970s, when the dream of poor third-world countries catching up with
the rich West still captured the imaginations of most world leaders. Starting
in the late 1980s, cultural critics in many parts of the world started to question
the very idea of development, arguing that development was a discourse that
operated as a powerful mechanism for the cultural, social, and economic
production of the Third World by the West (Rist 1997; Escobar 2011). These
analyses entailed a radical questioning of the core assumptions of develop-
ment, including growth, progress, and instrumental rationality. Some started
to talk about a “postdevelopment era” as an extension of these critiques, mean-
ing three interrelated things: first, development is displaced from its central-
ity in the representations of conditions in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. A
corollary of this first goal was to open up the discursive space to other ways of
describing those conditions, less mediated by the premises of development.
Second, discursive space is created to think about the end of development and
to identify alternatives to development, rather than development alternatives,
as a concrete possibility. Third, awareness is cultivated of the acute need to
Transitions to Postextractivism
Considering the great transition that might be unfolding, Italian design theo-
rist Ezio Manzini wrote:
The transition design project at cmu has a clear mission statement: “Transi-
tion Design acknowledges that we are living in ‘transition times’ and takes as
its central premise the need for societal transitions to more sustainable futures
and the belief that design has a role to play in these transitions” (Irwin, Tonkin-
wise, and Kossoff 2015, 2). This premise is spelled out in two major ways: by
demarcating a subfield of transition design within the school’s graduate pro-
gram, but with implications for design studies as a whole, and by propos-
ing a preliminary but well-thought-out conceptualization of transition de-
sign. The school’s graduate program structure is based on overlapping “design
tracks” (products, communications, and environments) and “areas of focus,”
including design for ser vice (“design within existing paradigms and systems
in which moderate positive change can be achieved”), design for social inno-
vation (“design within and for emerging paradigms and alternative economic
models leading to significant positive social change”), and transition design
(“design of and within new paradigms that will lead to radical positive social
and environmental change”). Both the tracks and the areas of focus are placed
within an overarching umbrella, “Design for Interactions” (among people, the
built world, and the natural environment). Tellingly, the approach explicitly
identifies the natural world as the context for all design activities, not only for
the transition design focus area.15
The transition design framework constitutes a significant intervention into
design discourse and education, at a moment when many design schools are
feeling the pressure to adapt to the mounting ecological and social challenges
of today’s world. This is of course easier said than done in a field that, since the
Bauhaus, has been so wedded to the making of unsustainable modern styles
of living. The cmu group’s identification of an area of design research, educa-
tion, and practice committed to radical social change in the face of structural
unsustainability can thus be seen as the group’s most courageous and proac-
tive intervention, not only within the design field but within the academy as
a whole. The intitiative to form a transition design track can be considered a
particular attempt at reorienting design, perhaps parallel to but different from
those cited in chapter 1 (such as those by John Thackara; Anthony Dunne and
Fiona Raby; and Pelle Ehn, Elizabeth Nilsson, and Richard Topgaard). The
5.1 cmu’s Transition Design Framework. The four areas represented co-evolve and
mutually reinforce each other. Source: Irwin (2015: 5). Redrawn based on diagram by
Terry Irwin, Gideon Kossoff, and Cameron Tonkinwise.
And perhaps the two most revealing propositions: “No podemos construir
lo nuestro con lo mismo” (“We cannot build our own realities with more of
the same”) and “Lo possible ya se hizo; ahora vamos por lo imposible” (“We
already accomplished the possible; let us now go for the impossible!”).
These statements are the tip of the iceberg of the irruption of what in Latin
America is called pensamiento autonómico, or autonomous thought. This chap-
ter inquires whether the Latin American notion of autonomía (autonomy),
along with the parallel notion of comunalidad, or the recrafting of communal
forms of being, and their associated practices, can be seen as laying the ground
for a particular kind of design thought. Buen Vivir, transitions to postextrac-
tivism, and the Planes de Vida (life plans or life projects) envisioned by indige-
Ever since the irruption of the Zapatistas and their cry of Ya Basta! (Enough Is
Enough!), the struggle for autonomy has raged in Latin America, principally
among indigenous peoples but also among other rural and urban groups. “Que
se vayan todos, que no quede ninguno!” (“Let them all go away, let not one
remain”), shouted the Argentinean unemployed to all the politicians and eco-
nomic elites in whose representations, the protesters claimed, nobody could
ever be trusted again after the economic collapse of 2001. Similar calls have
been heard since, for instance, among the Indignados movement of southern
Europe and the Occupy protesters in the United States. In Latin America the
call for autonomy involves not only a critique of formal democracy but an
attempt to construct an altogether different form of rule anchored in people’s
lives, a struggle for liberation and for a new type of society in harmony with
other peoples and cultures (Esteva 2015).
The Mexican development critic Gustavo Esteva has provided the follow-
ing useful distinction from the perspective of the tenacious resistance to
development, modernity, and globalization by indigenous and peasant com-
munities in southern Mexico. He distinguishes among three situations in terms
of the norms that regulate the social life of a collectivity:7
Let us consider an important concept of the Nasa mobilization, the Minga so-
cial y comunitaria (Social and Communal Collective Work). “The word [la
palabra] without action is empty. Action without the word is blind. The word
and the action outside the spirit of the community are death.”14 Notions of
community are making a comeback in diverse epistemic-political spaces, in-
cluding indigenous, Afrodescendant, and peasant mobilizations, particularly
in Mexico, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru; this rekindled interest in
things communal is also present in some urban struggles throughout the con-
tinent. The communal has also become an important concern for decolonial
feminism. It is also found in some transition-related approaches, for instance,
those that speak of commoning and community economies (e.g., Gibson-
Graham, Cameron, and Healy 2013). Talk of community in Latin America
may take a number of forms: comunalidad (communality), the communal,
the popular-communal, struggles for the common, communitism (commu-
nity activism), and so forth. Here I will use the communal or communal logics
to encompass this range of concepts.
The remainder of this chapter will lay down additional elements for thinking
about the relations among autonomy, design, and the realization of the com-
munal. This will be done in three parts. The first identifies some principles for
autonomous design, drawing on a particular experience in Colombia in the
late 1990s; the second extends these lessons based on the chapter’s discussion
of autonomy and the communal. The third, finally, sketches a transition imagi-
nation exercise for a particular region in the Colombian southwest.
Autonomous design—as a design praxis with communities that has the
goal of contributing to their realization as the kinds of entities they are—
stems from the following presuppositions (slightly modified from pcn and
Escobar 1998):19
1 Every community practices the design of itself: its organizations, its social
relations, its practices, its relation to the environment. If for most of his-
tory communities practiced a sort of “natural design” independent of ex-
pert knowledge (ontonomy, spontaneous coping), contemporary situ-
ations involve design based on both detached and embodied forms of
reflection.
2 Every design activity must start with the strong presupposition that
people are practitioners of their own knowledge and from there must ex-
amine how people themselves understand their reality. This epistemo-
logical, ethical, and political principle is at the basis of both autonomy
and autonomous design. (Conventional development planning is in-
tended to get people to practice somebody else’s knowledge, namely,
the experts’!)
3 What the community designs, in the first instance, is an inquiring or
learning system about itself. As designers, we may become co-researchers
Well-being Territory/Region-Territory
Autonomy
(Life Project) (Political Project)
6.1 Basis for a culturally and ecologically sustainable development and perspective of the
future. Redrawn based on diagram from pcn (2000: 5; 2004: 38).
ented design? In this and similar cases, one could argue that a codesign pro-
cess is at play in which communities, activists, and some outside participants
(including expert designers) engage in a collaborative exercise, with planner,
designer, decision maker, and guarantor coinciding to a great extent with the
communities and the movement.
It is noteworthy that this experience was based on the organizational princi-
ples agreed on by the Proceso de Comunidades Negras (Black Communities
Process, pcn) since 1993 (and which remain in force to this day, even if in an
enriched form that nevertheless maintains their basic structure). These princi-
ples include the affirmation of identity (the right to be black); the right to the
territory (as the space for the exercise of being); autonomy (as the right to
the conditions for the exercise of identity); the right to their own vision of the
future, including the communities’ right to choose their own model of devel-
opment and of the economy according to their cosmovision; and the right to
historical reparations (see Escobar 2008, 221–227). These principles anchor
not only the internal decision making of the organization but its relation to
the State and to other actors. In cases such as this, it is of crucial importance for
designers to develop a profound understanding of the political project of the move-
ment (not necessarily to share it in its entirety but to apprehend it fully) and to
be willing to submit all codesign activities to the same principles. This is a sine
∙ Has as its main goal the realization of the communal, understood as the
creation of the conditions for the community’s ongoing self-creation
and successful structural coupling with their globalized environments.
∙ Embraces ancestrality, as it emanates from the history of the relational
worlds in question, and futurality, as a statement about futures for com-
munal realizations.
∙ Privileges interventions and actions that foster nonliberal, non-State-
centered, and noncapitalist forms of organization.
∙ Creates auspicious spaces for the life projects of communities and the
creation of convivial societies.
∙ Considers the community’s engagement with heteronomous social ac-
tors and technologies (including markets, digital technologies, extrac-
tive operations, and so forth) from the perspective of the preservation
and enhancement of the community’s autopoiesis.
∙ Takes seriously the transition design imperatives of place building, re-
localization, renewed attention to materiality and nonhumans, and the
creation of interepistemic collaborative organizations.
∙ Gives particular attention to the role of commoning in the realization
of the communal; conversely, it devises effective means to encourage
diverse economies (social and solidarity economies, alternative capital-
ist and noncapitalist economies).
∙ Articulates with the trends toward Buen Vivir and the rights of nature
and with related trends elsewhere (e.g., degrowth, commons).
∙ Fosters pluriversal openings; it is, to this extent, a form of design for the
pluriverse, for the flourishing of life on the planet.
∙ Thinks deeply about, and creates spaces for, strengthening the connec-
tion between the realization of the communal and the Earth (its relational
weave at every place and everywhere), in ways that enable humans to
Un/Sustainability
(anthropocene)
Earth
(integrity, ONTOLOGICAL / TRANSITION DESIGN
self-organization,
autopoiesis)
Sustainment
(Ecozoic era,
Autonomy Futurality ecological civilization,
(realization of (postdevelopment, pluriverse)
the communal) Buen Vivir,
Life Projects)
6.2 Autonomy, Transition, Sustainment. A framework for autonomous design and design
for transitions.
The Cauca River, Colombia’s second most important waterway, runs for 1,360
kilometers, flowing northward from its origin in the Colombian Massif, a
group of high Andean mountains in Colombia’s southwest. Seventy percent
of Colombia’s freshwater is said to originate in the massif. It is there also that
the Andean mountain chain splits into three, giving origin to inter-Andean
valleys, such as the Cauca Valley. The valley opens up progressively in between
the western and central cordilleras (the latter has several snowy peaks above
five thousand meters). The first part of the larger Cauca River basin (the focus
of this exercise, known as the Alto Cauca, or upper Cauca) widens progres-
sively, following the river for more than five hundred kilometers, covering an
area of 367,000 hectares; its width ranges between fifteen and thirty-two kilo-
meters. It is an incredibly beautiful valley, flanked by the two cordilleras and
traversed by many smaller rivers and streams. The flat plains have an altitude
of a thousand meters and an average temperature of twenty-five degrees centi-
grade. A traveler looking at the valley with a relational gaze in the 1950s would
no doubt conclude that it could easily support a very pleasant and culturally
and ecologically rich existence. Locals actually refer to the valley with the
name of the most famous colonial hacienda still standing: El Paraiso (Para-
dise). This future, however, was being foreclosed by the 1950s as the defutur-
ing forces gained speed and strength.
In terms of administrative divisions, most of the valley falls within the Valle
del Cauca department, but an important area lies in the Cauca department
to the south. The Alto Cauca starts at the Salvajina Dam, constructed in the
mid-1980s by the Cauca Regional Autonomous Development Corporation to
Even a purely theoretical transition design exercise for a region such as this is
a daunting task, and even more so if one hopes for some degree of implemen-
tation. Yet considering the huge number of actual cases of impactful regional
re/development and revitalization worldwide (including the famed Tennes-
see Valley Authority in the United States, and of course the Cauca Valley after
the construction of the Salvajina Dam, all considered tremendously successful
from a capitalistic perspective), the question arises, why not? Conventional
regional re/development, it goes without saying, has the advantage of relying
on the naturalized histories of capitalist development, whereas the type of re-
gional transition envisioned here would go against the grain of such histories.
Many of the design ideas discussed in previous chapters may, of course, be
invoked in support of the exercise in question. However, as Colombian design
theorist Andrea Botero, from the media lab at Aalto University in Helsinki,
argues, “despite these advancements, our understanding of how to go about
setting up, carrying on, and more broadly, sustaining collaborative and open-
ended design processes in explicit ways is still limited” (2013, 13). As she goes
on to say, there is a great need for methods that enable collaborative design
over longer periods than usual, that elaborate on the evolving roles of design-
ers under this extended temporality (beyond, say, being initiators or facilita-
tors), and that take to heart the distributed nature of design agency, including,
one needs to add, nonhumans. The articulation of design-in-use practices in
the context of temporally extended collective design activities is particularly
important at this point in time.
It is relatively easy for ecologists and transition activists and designers to
propose scenarios to trigger the design imagination. I have proposed one such
scenario above. Recall, first, the overwhelming landscape of omnipresent sug-
arcane and cattle, and their in/visible effects. Then try to reimagine it “as a
veritable agroecological stronghold of organic fruit, vegetable, grain, and ex-
otic plant production and as a multicultural region of small and medium-size
farm producers, a decentralized network of functioning towns and medium-
size cities, and so forth.” Easy to imagine, perhaps, but still locally unthink-
able. What follows are some elements that might go into a transition design
There is a whole range of other issues that could be considered from the
viewpoint of transition design frameworks, such as the relation between dif-
fuse and expert design; the creation of knowledges that might travel from one
location to another; the learning process as the project moves on; the role
of design research; the use of prototypes and maps; the creation of scenarios
under rubric of small, local, open, and connected strategies (Manzini 2015);
digital and live storytelling; the design of tool kits from and for communal
spaces; smart media campaigns; and questions of scale, among others.
This presentation is of course extremely tentative and general. It is offered
more as an indication of the kind of design inquiries that might be at play in tran-
sition efforts than as an actual road map to be followed. I am perfectly aware
of the overly ambitious nature of the proposal. Let us say that it was intended
largely as a theoretical exercise and, as such, as a contribution to critical de-
sign studies. It was also intended to buttress the idea that “another design is
possible,” a design for the pluriverse. At the same time, it might be considered
an example of the dissenting design imagination that, as this book has tried
to show, is emerging in various design domains. Perhaps, in the last instance,
this effort was my imperfect attempt at making a political-ontological state-
As we said in 2005 and say again now, the releasing (la desalambrada, or
getting rid of the barbed wire) of Uma Kiwe (Mother Earth) will depend
on uncoiling the heart (desalambrar el corazón). And uncoiling the heart
is going to depend on uncoiling Mother Earth. Who would have believed
it: heart and earth are one single being. That is what we know and feel in
this moment. Being this way, should we get on the train of progress? . . .
Looking at it clearly, we are left with but one path: we have been saying it
for years, but now it gains strength: au-ton-o-my. It is not difficult to see
it if the heart is awake. And, speaking of autonomy, it is something very
simple: to live as we like and not as is imposed on us. To take life where we
want it to go and not where a boss—whoever he might be—says we have
to be. But we cannot live autonomy without a territory. And there cannot
be territory without Mother Earth. And there is no Mother Earth as long
as she is enslaved. . . . That is why we have returned to our farms since De-
cember 2014. This is why these are our farms and not others. . . . In that way
we return to the path of autonomy, and we open the trail to the freedom of
Uma Kiwe. We know . . . that we are capable of a little, and that we can only
learn and triumph as an entanglement, a heap (en montonera). Not only of
male and female Indians: una motonera (a swarm) with peasants, with Af-
rodescendants, with people from the city. It is true that the doubt is sown
and is strong. We invite you to turn off the television and look at one an-
other face-to-face: our history, our struggle, our words, which are clumsy
but sincere. . . . Turn on your flashlight and illuminate well. Then you will
see clearly that this struggle is out of Northern Cauca and not from or for
Northern Cauca. Out of the Nasa people but not of the Nasa people. Every
freed farm, here or in any corner of the world, is a territory that adds up to
reestablish the equilibrium of Uma Kiwe. It is our common house, our only
one. There it is, yes: come in, the door is open.30
In this incredibly lucid statement lies the basis for autonomous and transi-
tion design praxes, to be developed a bit further in the conclusion. The door
is open.
Tell me how the universe came about, and I will tell you who you are.
We can choose who we wish to become when we have decided on
an in principle undecidable question.
· von Foerster, “Ethics and Second-Order Cybernetics”
It is often said that the notions of relationality and the communal apply only
to rural or indigenous peoples, or to those cases where people maintain an at-
tachment to a territory; in other words, they do not apply to urban moderns
always on the move. This is a partial truth at best, for we all exist within the plu-
riverse. For those of us who live in the delocalized and intensely liberal worlds
of middle-class urban modernity, the historical imperative is clearly that of re-
communalizing and reterritorializing. New territories of existence and novel
forms of being communal need to be imagined, many of them unprecedented,
appropriate to the age of unsettlement. For those of us without an ancestral
mandate to help our worlds persevere, the question becomes, how do we re-
create and recommunalize our worlds? How do we develop forms of knowing
that do not take words and beings and things out of the flow of life—that is,
forms of knowing and being that do not recompose nature as external to us, as
dead or unsentient matter? What kinds of rituals might we develop to this end?
How do we render our inevitable existential condition of being entre mundos,
between worlds, into a hopeful praxis of living, a space for contributing to
stitch worlds together within a pluriversal ethics?
The fact is that we are not just individuals; while each of us is indeed a
singular person, we inevitably exist as knots or relays in networks—nay,
weaves—of relations. The communal is the name we give to these entangle-
ments and weaves. There is no contradiction between the singular person and
the communal as the space within which she or he always exists in relation. As
Ivan Illich liked to put it (Gustavo Esteva, pers. comm., July 28, 2015), for those
of us who were not born in the midst of a community and who have been con-
structed as individuals by our histories, there is always friendship and love as
the seeds to forge new commons.
Gloria Anzaldúa refers to the condition currently faced by many people as
“living in nepantla, the overlapping space between different perceptions and
belief systems” (2002, 541), or living between worlds. This condition renders
conventional categories of identity obsolete, calling for new paradigms and
Ah, si pudiera algún día Ah! If only I could live just like that,
Vivir así, sin palabras. someday, speechless.
A new statement travels the world: La Liberación de la Madre Tierra (the Lib-
eration of Mother Earth). Recently expressed by the Nasa people, it echoes
in many corners of the planet and announces other worlds to come. “But we
say—as long as we continue to be indigenous, in other words, children of
the earth—that our mother is not currently free for life, but she will be when
she returns to being the soil and collective home of the peoples who take care
of her, respect her, and live with her. As long as it is not this way, neither will
we be free, her children. All peoples are slaves along with the animals and
all beings of life, as long as we do not achieve that our mother recovers her
freedom.”2
Conclusion 203
It is somewhat paradoxical that statements of this sort are uttered in con-
texts of war and aggression against communities. But it is precisely because
what is at stake in these contexts is the defense of life that the emphasis on
the complementarity between humans and nonhumans emerges with partic-
ular clarity and force (“who would have believed it: heart and earth are one
single being”).3 These narratives of communities in resistance evince a kind
of knowledge that, “while a reflection of ancestral wisdom, is not an issue of
essential identities, but rather signals the possibility of widening the meaning
and practices of togetherness within a process of collective weaving” (P. Botero
2013, 50). Ancestrality, in the view of many of these collectives, implies actively
looking at the future.
What I am proposing is that all transition thinking needs to develop this
attunement to the Earth. In the end, it seems to me that a plural sense of civili-
zational transitions that contemplates—each vision in its own way—the Lib-
eration of Mother Earth as a fundamental transition design principle is the most
viable historical project that humanity can undertake at present. Elsewhere,
in an article about the state of Latin American critical thought, I argued that
critical thought today is an interweaving of three threads: leftist thinking, autono-
mous thought, and the thought of the Earth. While these threads overlap, they
are distinct. The Left’s concerns with exploitation, domination, inequality, and
social justice are as important as ever, yet much leftist thinking continues to be
anthropocentric, patriarchal, ethnocentric, and universalizing, and its view of
transitioning to socialism or postcapitalism is limiting. Many of the autonomy
thinkers, for their part, maintain ontological commitments to unexamined
forms of anthropocentrism, hence the need to imbue autonomous thought
with a strong notion of relationality. Finally, the thought of the Earth—or rather,
sentipensar con la Tierra, thinking-feeling with the Earth (Escobar 2014)—does
not refer so much to ecological thinking as to the profound conviction of our
indissoluble connection with the Earth and with every thing that exists in the
universe, the unity of all beings.
The thought of the Earth has its own implications, eloquently expressed by
the nasa activists in the same text: “Nos liberamos con la tierra para convivir.
Este es nuestro llamado y compromiso. Esto significa no solo liberar la tierra
y empoderarse de la lucha, sino también liberar el pensamiento, el corazón,
las voluntades, la identidad, la alegría, la conciencia y la esperanza.” (We free
ourselves as we free the Earth so that we can live together well. This is our
call and our commitment. This does not mean only to liberate the land and
empower ourselves through the struggle, but to free up the thought, the heart,
204 Conclusion
the will, identity, happiness, consciousness, and hope.) Like in Bob Marley’s
stunningly political “Redemption Song,” each person and each group will
need to reflect on this call in her or his own way.4
In The Darker Side of Western Modernity, the decolonial theorist Walter Mi-
gnolo (2011) identifies five global trajectories that, in his view, shape pos-
sible futures: de-Westernization, re-Westernization, reorientations of the
Left, spiritual options, and decolonial options. The latter two can be seen as
“roads to re-existence delinking from the belief that development and moder-
nity are the only way to the future” (64). Which future prevails will depend
on the struggles and negotiations among these trajectories, likely without a
winner. “If there is a winner,” Mignolo adds, “it would be the agreement that
global futures shall be polycentric and noncapitalist. Which means that a
struggle for world domination . . . would yield to pluriversality as a universal
project” (33–34). Citing Humberto Maturana’s maxim that “when one puts
objectivity in parentheses, all views, all verses in the multiverse are equally
valid. Understanding this, you lose the passion for changing the other” (27),
Mignolo goes on to expound the decolonial option as the clearer path toward
the pluriverse. This is a hopeful vision. It seems to me that one could explic-
itly posit emergent visions of transitions as another historical force within the
spectrum of trajectories. Transition thinking may be found in the leftist, spiri-
tual, and decolonial pathways imagined by Mignolo; however, in the senses
discussed here—as an array of explicit discourses and imaginations—it can-
not be encompassed within any of them.
This book is about redesigning design from within and from without, a
project on which a number of design thinkers, as we have seen, are already
embarked. Little is known about how this process is taking place in the Global
South, and in this book I have dealt with this issue only obliquely, through
my discussion of transition narratives and autonomous design. The process
of building bridges between transition design visions in the Global North and
the Global South has already commenced. This goal is present, for instance,
in Colombian design theorist Alfredo Gutiérrez Borrero’s (2015a) conceptual
framework that explicitly speaks about “el sur del diseño y el diseño del sur”
(the south of design and the design of the south), where south stands as an
onto-epistemic border where pluriversal theoretico-practical design projects
Conclusion 205
might emerge. In contradistinction with much northern design practice, with
its instrumental and commercial orientation, such projects would explore
viable designs stemming from communal worlds, where each community
would practice the design of itself on the basis of local, decolonial knowledges
(Gutiérrez Borrero 2014, 2015a, 2015b). Knowledges and ontologies from the
South would act as alternative operating systems enabling autonomous forms
of design. This sort of “anti-industrial design”—or, rather, way of provincial-
izing industrial design as one possibility among many—explicitly aims at de-
signs for conviviality.
Diseños del sur also stands for the rich variety of diseños otros (other designs
and design other wise) associated with notions that name the onto-political
thrust of groups embarked on their own alternatives to hegemonic moder-
nity, such as Buen Vivir, ubuntu, swaraj, or degrowth (Kothari, Demaria, and
Acosta 2015). Finding inspiration in the Lakota principle of mitakuye oyasin
that posits that not only humans are persons but also rocks, soil , rivers, plants,
and even things, Gutiérrez Borrero goes on to posit southern forms of design
based on a relational ontology of multiple personhood. From here he draws
a vital question:
What happens, then, when we design on the basis of design thinking based
on other notions and by other names, of sciences which are not such, in
order to create alternatives to development with technologies and indus-
tries that are something else? We are confronted by older idioms that we
are just beginning to hear anew, and by epistemologies in search of aliases.
Designs from the south were always there, albeit with other names, we
are just starting to perceive them. It takes time to recognize them. Now
we need to begin the task of designing with them and of letting ourselves
be designed by them. (2015a, 126)
This listening to design’s idioms from the Global South animates a recent
set of essays assembled under the concept of “design in the borderlands” (Ka-
lantidou and Fry 2015). Explicitly conceived from the perspective of the geo-
politics of design knowledge, and in full acknowledgment of design’s Eurocen-
trism and its status as a global force, the volume attempts to “unconceal the way
that design operates within a global world order” and, conversely, to ascertain
the role that design can play in creating decolonial futures (Pereira and Gillett
2015, 109). While paying attention to both “the globalization of Eurocentric
power by design” and “the design of globalization by the Eurocentric mind”
206 Conclusion
(Fry and Kalantidou 2015, 5), the volume argues for the existence of “contra-
Western understandings of design” (6) and illustrates instances of place-based
design practices that enact such counterdiscourses. One learns in the volume
about resourceful vernacular design practices by other names (for instance, in
Africa), the emergence of the design profession in various parts of the world,
the possibilities for ontological redesigning in the Global South, and the help-
ful notion of “designing for creative ontological friction” in a way that “explic-
itly and reflexively recognizes ontological difference across different social
formations” ( James 2015, 93). The result is both a pluralization of the history
of design and the beginning of a genealogy of decolonial design practices.
The borderlands are strategically important spaces for the reconstitution of
an ethics and praxis of care in relation to what ought to be designed, and how.
For Tony Fry (2017), this would be an ontology of repair of the broken beings
and broken worlds that have resulted from centuries of defuturing designing and
their alleged accumulated outcome, the anthropocene. Herein lies the possibil-
ity of, and ground for, the reconstitution of design in, for, and from the South,
not as a total rejection of design but as “critical selection and local innovation”
(46) involving the creation of structures of care toward the Sustainment:
The central issue and project for design of/by and for the South is another
kind of ontological designing—one based on the creation of structures of
care able to constitute the Sustainment. . . . How can a designer be designed
to be a provider of care via the designing of things that ontologically care?
The answer to this question requires acknowledging that a new kind of de-
signer depends upon the arrival of a transformed habitus. . . . [It requires
an] understanding of design’s implication in the state of the world and the
worlds within it. To gain this understanding means fully grasping the scale
and impact of design as an ontological force of and in the world in its mak-
ing and unmaking. . . . Acquiring such knowledge leads the proto-designer to
learn how to read what is brought into being by design causally. Thereafter,
what design serves is the creation of a future with a future. (28, 29)
Conclusion 207
The convergence between transition design narratives in the North and in
the South can also be explored by positing the existence of two converging dy-
namics responding to the defuturing and delocalization effected by the global
order: the first dynamic is Ezio Manzini’s cosmopolitan localism, “capable of
generating a new sense of place,” as a historical condition of communities
(2015, 25). This dynamic occurs more readily within the Global North, given
the extent of the decommunalization of societies and the specific imperative
of relocalization that ensues. Cosmopolitan localism entails a dynamic rein-
vention of the communal through a multiplicity of activities concerning food,
the economy, crafts, and care. Many of these activities can also be seen in the
Global South. Yet, and this is the second dynamic, there are other, somewhat
specific dynamics in the Global South where old (vernacular) and new forms
of design combine, yielding an entire range of situations, from improvisational
design for survival to the design of urban neighborhoods out of displacement,
and from alternative capitalist and noncapitalist economies to autonomous
struggles for Buen Vivir. Would it be too far-fetched to see in these twofold,
albeit glaringly uneven, dynamics a convergence of the sort intuited by Man-
zini? “All of these ideas, the activities they refer to, and the relationships they
generate seem to me beautiful islands of applied cultural and socioeconomic
wisdom. They are islands in the sea of unsustainable ways of being and doing
that is, unfortunately, still the mainstream throughout the world. The good
news is that the number of these islands is growing and generating a wide
archipelago. An archipelago that could be seen as the emerging dry land of
a rising continent: the already visible expression of a new civilization” (26).
These convergences are of course not guaranteed. Transition design needs
to deepen its critique of capitalism and liberalism and its awareness of the ways
in which it still shelters modernist commitments such as belief in the individ-
ual, anthropocentrism, and reliance on political processes that depend, by their
very nature, on the ontology of subjects and objects.5 Northern transition de-
sign visions need to think decolonially and postdevelopmentally, as discussed
in chapter 5. Conversely, autonomous design, diseños otros, and designs from
the South need to broach the questions of innovation and technoscience in
earnest. In this it has a lot to learn from ecological design in northern visions.
To return to Manzini: “I think that what social innovation is indicating, with
its idea of a well-being based on the quality of places and communities, is the
seed of a new culture. Or better, a metaculture which could be the platform
for a multiplicity of cultures [a pluriverse] . . . the culture of a society in which
places and communities are not isolated entities but become nodes in a vari-
208 Conclusion
ety of networks . . . helping to create a resilient planet where it would be possi-
ble for us and for future generations to live, and hopefully to live well” (207).
The convergence of transition design, design for autonomy, and diseños otros
might prove to be a powerful force for counteracting the centuries-old but
ongoing ontological occupation of people’s lives (communities, territories,
places) by the nonconvivial technologies of patriarchal capitalist modern de-
signs. By connecting to each other, they might extend like rhizomes, possibly
emerging into local and regional topologies of partially connected worlds,
eventually leading to the rising continents of relational living envisioned by
Manzini and others.
Conclusion 209
of consumerism: “This civilization of ours will have to end one day. But we
have a huge role to play in determining when it ends and how quickly. . . .
Global warming may be an early symptom of that death” (2008, 43–44). He
goes further, inviting us to actively accept the end of our civilization by medi-
tating on this thought: “Breathing in, I know that this civilization is going to die.
Breathing out, this civilization cannot escape dying” (55). This is the call that the
transition “bells of mindfulness” makes to us: to move beyond a civilization
that has become so antithetical to the ontology of interbeing.6
There is a second tactic we can take in relation to modernity, akin to J. K.
Gibson-Graham’s analysis of capitalism and political economy (Gibson-
Graham 2006; Gibson-Graham, Cameron, and Healy 2013); this would in-
clude three steps: first, to deconstruct the modern centrism of most social
theory, that is, the way in which social theory’s lenses inevitably endow
modernity with the ability to fully and naturally occupy the field of the so-
cial, so as to make invisible or secondary other ways of constructing socie-
ties; second, to reconstruct our understanding of the social by positing the ex-
istence of modern, alternative modern, and nonmodern (or amodern) forms
of being, knowing, and doing; and, third, to inquire into how we can foster
the alternative modern and nonmodern forms collectively. This would in-
clude the question of how we might cultivate ourselves as subjects who desire
noncapitalist, nonliberal, and nonmodern forms of life. For under the visible
part of the iceberg of the social (what is perceivable as conventionally modern)
there lies an entire set of practices that can hardly be described as modern and
that perhaps can be theorized as nonmodern or amodern (besides those that
are clearly anti-modern). This is a theoretico-political project that still remains
to be done.7
A common strategy by critical scholars is to pluralize modernity. There is
a risk, however, in doing so. While it makes a lot of sense to speak about al-
ternative or multiple modernities worldwide—different European moderni-
ties, Latin American modernities, Chinese or Arab modernities, or what have
you—the risk is to reintroduce, through the back door of the premise of a sin-
gle shared world or real, the universality of dominant modern ways of seeing.
A second danger is to absolve modernity from any wrongdoing, since after all
many of those who are “differently modern” (say, among peripheral or non-
dominant European regions or cultures) will argue that they never were part
of the dominant modern order (from which they have nonetheless benefited
immensely). To avoid these risks, the pluralization of modernity will have to
be done decolonially—that is, keeping in sight three processes: dominant
210 Conclusion
modernity’s negation of other worlds’ difference, the resistance and excess
constituted by subaltern subjects at the fractured locus of the colonial differ-
ence (Lugones 2010b; de la Cadena 2015), and the challenges to the dominant
modern core stemming from nondominant modern sources. In other words,
all worlds need to broach the project of remaking themselves from the critical per-
spective of their historical location within the modern/colonial world system.8
For moderns, actively facing the ontological challenges posed by the idea
of the end of modernity—of a world significantly or radically different from
the current one—is not easy; it induces a type of fright that is deeply unset-
tling. Ontologically oriented design needs to articulate this civilizational anxi-
ety in effective ways. After all, most other worlds have had to exist (and still do)
with the fright and, not infrequently, the reality of their vanishing. An impor-
tant element in the strategy of nondominant or alternative moderns would
be to efectively activate their specific critique of the dominant modern (which
would place them in the position of fellow travelers, not enemies, of those
who uphold more explicitly positions that are “beyond modernity”).
Conclusion 211
Always at play in these debates is the question of the real. By its very nature,
this question will remain unsettled. The position I have taken in this book is
consistent with a philosophy of strong relationality: an epistemology and on-
tology without subjects, objects, and processes that are inherently or intrinsi-
cally existent by themselves—what biologist Kriti Sharma (2015) calls radical
contingentism. It is our epistemologies and ontologies that sustain “both the
sense of separateness of objects from subjects and the sense of interaction of
objects with subjects” (100). Subjects, objects, processes, structures, essen-
tial properties and identities, and so forth depend on these assumptions. This
folk essentialism is stronger for those of us who go on living in the Cartesian
theater. Some spiritual traditions like Buddhism and animism and many tra-
ditional cosmologies have ways to diffuse these essentialisms or hold them
at bay (through particular practices and rituals but often through mundane
daily practices of interbeing). Shifting our existence—our bodies, minds, and
souls—into a relational ontology challenges any objectifying notion of a real.
To listen to Sharma once more:
So-called traditional peoples have no problem living with this realization. For
the Kogui of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, each act of living is an act of
weaving—one weaves life in thought as much as on the land, and certainly in
resistance; indeed, it is in the loom that all the elements of the world come
together. The Kogui, moreover, live with the conviction that their weaving
is essential for the balance of the universe as a whole. In the Fanti-Ashanti
tradition from the Gulf of Benin, the bisexual spider god/goddess Anansi
incessantly weaves life from her own material and cognitive resources (Lo-
zano 2015; Arocha 1999). Since the conquest and slavery, her threads unite
Africa and America, and in the Colombia Pacific, Anansi is said to have cre-
ated the fractal jungle and the meandering estuaries with threads she pulled
out of her belly. She or he continues to link each newborn to the territory
212 Conclusion
through the practice of the ombligada, which in the Pacific is carried out by
midwives.10 For Betty Ruth Lozano (2015), Anansi is a metaphor of survival and
self-sufficiency, and midwives must be seen as practitioners of reexistence and
as spiritual leaders who embody an insurgent imagination. It is thus that these
relational worlds struggle to persevere as the kind of worlds they are, even if
under ferocious attack.
Those of us who inhabit the liberal worlds of “real realities” and “autono-
mous individuals” can certainly come to understand the profound insights of
relationality theoretically; yet conceptual analysis can carry us only partway in
the journey toward more relational living. To the theoretical work we need to
add some form of practice that takes us into other habits and modes of living
and interexisting, of being in a world that is made up of things that are real yet
not inherently independent.11 Shifting to the terrain of practice places us in
a situation, from the realists’ perspective, where the question of the real can
never be ultimately settled, so it shall remain so.
Conclusion 213
Our ancestors in non-patriarchal cultures lived in a systemic dynamic in-
terconnectedness within a cosmos that they were aware of and able to inte-
grate. And as they lived their cosmic interconnectedness, they lived it in a
systemic thinking of multidimensional coherences that they knew how to
evoke but could not describe in detail. In that way of living they were not
concerned with controlling the different aspects of their existence. They
just lived them; and they did so through the conservation of practices that
both conserved and realized their harmonious participation in the cosmic
dynamics of their daily living in the human community to which they be-
longed. (2008, 126; emphasis added)
214 Conclusion
tions further into an objectifying and individualizing mode of hierarchy and
control) becomes a crucial question. Caroline Gatt and Tim Ingold’s (2013)
nonteleological and open notion of design offers one such approach, one
capable of giving direction to collective processes without fixed end points,
pathways without targets, weavings rather than blueprints, planes de vida (life
projects) rather than conventional plans, and so forth. It seems to me that the
frameworks of transition design, design for social innovation, autonomous
design, and diseños otros aim in this direction, even if often falling short of the
task, whether because of the demands of strategy, lack of clarity about what is
at stake, organizational pressures, or what have you.
That said, I believe the issue of whether indigenous communities design
should remain an open question. But from this provisional discussion we
can rearticulate the question in a way that applies to communities and social
groups in many parts of the world: how do we make efective weavings and fos-
ter mutually enhancing entanglements of worlds in the face of the catastrophe
visited on the planet by the current global capitalist One-World order? Earth’s
territories, including cities, are where we, humans and not, go on weaving life
together. Design can thus become an open invitation for us all to become mindful
and efective weavers of the mesh of life. To do so, design needs to contribute
to creating conditions that dampen our impulse to think and act like modern
individuals—to interrupting our “self-alchemization” based on notions of self-
improvement in favor of an ethics of autonomous interexistence, albeit with-
out negating our capacity to operate in modern worlds at the same time. This
calls for designs that foster convivial reconstruction and that promote “healthy
and enabling instrumentalizations” for behaving responsibly toward “the as-
semblages in which one finds oneself participating” (Bennett 2010, 12, 36).
Gatt and Ingold’s perspective would have designers follow “the ways of the
world as they unfold” (145). It argues for a type of flexibility that “lies not only
in finding the ways of the world’s becoming—the way it wants to go—but
also in bending it to an evolving purpose. It is not, then, only a matter of going
with the flow, for one can give it direction as well. Designing for life is about
giving direction rather than specifying end points. It is in this regard that it
also involves foresight [futuring]” (2013, 145). To realist ears, this sounds like
phenomenological utopia, perhaps nonsense, even more so if one attends to
this notion’s sequitur: “Design, in this sense, does not transform the world, it is
rather part of the world transforming itself” (146; emphasis added).
It might be that all communities are poised today, to varying degrees, be-
tween living according to their embodied and place-based norms, on the one
Conclusion 215
hand, and giving explicit and effective direction to their collective life, on the
other. The issue is how to do it from within a culture of relationality and a biology
of love by working at the level of the collective emotioning that is the basis of
the social life of a collectivity, while avoiding falling back into established cat-
egories and merely utilitarian “preferred solutions”—in other words, by con-
tinually renewing the will to be communal. Perhaps this is what is meant by
disoñar (to embed design with dreams, to dream in order to create), a concept
used by some groups in Colombia to signal a practice that is different from,
and goes well beyond, the well-intentioned but ultimately self-defeating proj-
ects of “saving the planet” and “helping others.”14 To these slogans, one might
counter with this one: A disoñar, a re-diseñar, a recomunalizar! Dream-design,
redesign, recommunalize!
216 Conclusion
explicit the onto-epistemic politics of translation going on between worlds
under conditions of partial connection that are also asymmetrical relations.16
One way to think about this difference, as Marisol de la Cadena (2015)
meticulously exemplifies in her recent ethnography of multiply interacting
“Andean worlds,” is in terms of the ontological excess that subaltern worlds
continue to exhibit in relation to dominant worlds. There is, for instance,
much in Andean indigenous worlds that does not abide by the divide between
humans and nonhumans, even if the divide is also present in many of their
practices. The question thus arises of how to understand worlds that clearly
live partly outside of the separation between nature and humanity but who
also live with it, ignore it, are affected by it, utilize it strategically, and reject
it—all at the same time. A pluriversal attitude in relating to indigenous groups
who defend mountains or lakes on the basis that they are “sentient beings” or
“sacred entities” (our modern translation) would allow mountains or lakes to
be what they are, not mere objects or independently existing things; above all,
it would suspend the act of translating these arguments into “beliefs,” which is
the main way in which moderns can accommodate them from the perspective
of an ontology of intrinsically existent objects or nonhumans. Clarity about
these issues of partial connection and translation is essential in design activi-
ties in pluriversal contexts.
A timely question for all those worlds that never wanted, or no longer want,
to abide by allegedly universal rules is that of how to relate with dominant
worlds that do not want to relate. To develop tools that enable going beyond
the modern notion of politics based on the partition of reality into discrete
and unconnected subjects and objects is crucial; this implies recognizing that
while worlds are connected to one another, they diverge at the same time—
indeed, such divergence, and not only homogenization, is a sign of our times.
In fact, subaltern worlds need to diverge in order to live in partial connection
with dominant ones. A decolonial politics would allow for this divergence to
take place, “with no other guarantee than the absence of ontological same-
ness” (de la Cadena 2015, 281). Is this enough to go on, at least for those of
us who inhabit dominant worlds and yet are committed to an ethics of con-
tributing to bringing about more favorable conditions for the perseverance
of the relational worlds under attack? Are these ideas enough in order to de-
sign/struggle in tandem with the worlds of the peoples-territory discussed in
chapter 6? With communities in the Global North also determined to embark
on their own transition path toward the pluriverse? How do we let ourselves
be affected by these worlds? How can we “disrupt the composition through
Conclusion 217
which the world as we know it constantly makes itself homogenous” (de la Ca-
dena 2015, 282), by building on what in each world challenges the One-World
World’s ability to fulfill itself?
Let’s quote Mario Blaser at length to close this question for now:
Political ontology is thus not a new approach for another realist claim on the
real; in fact, one may say that the worlds briefly described in this book are not
“really existing” ontologies “out there” but a manner of foregrounding the array
of ways of conceiving what exists so as to make palpable the claim of multiple
ontologies or worlds. Political ontology is, in a way, a “foundationless founda-
tional” field (Blaser 2013, 551) with a particular political sensibility, an open-
ended ethical and theoretico-political proposition, rather than a hard-nosed
claim on the real. Political ontology is a way of telling stories differently, in the
hope that other spaces for the enactment of the multiple ontologies making
up the pluriverse might open up.
As the scale and pace of destruction continue to expand through the mas-
sive extractive operations needed to keep the capitalist industrial system
going, these issues take on added meaning. Environmental conflicts are often
ontological conflicts; patriarchal capitalist modernity entails the ontologi-
cal occupation of the existential territories of humans and nonhumans; and
people’s struggles are thus ontological struggles. Hence the importance of plac-
ing design within this ontological politics, including the negotiation of what
counts as political and real.
218 Conclusion
ralities among social groups for whom the notion of linear, cumulative time
does not make much cultural sense, where even life and death are so intermin-
gled as not to mark beginnings and ends. Moreover, is not the notion of the
future inevitably compromised in representations of the Global South, where
poor countries always end up at the losing end of the “uneven distribution of
apocalyptic futures” so central, for instance, to climate change discourses?17
Why, then, use future(s) at all? Let us see if we can gain further clarity on the
issue of future(s) that has remained unproblematized in this book so far.
We hinted in the introduction at the idea of the bifurcation taking place
regarding the question of “posthuman” futures. This is the open question par
excellence, regardless of the certainty with which the proponents of the most
visible answer to the posthuman uphold their views. This bifurcation involves
two paths, which we may call “return to Earth” and “the human beyond biol-
ogy.”18 By the first I mean—in the company of the many sages, activists, and in-
tellectuals from territorialized communities; wise elders from “an alternative
West”; and ecological and feminist thinkers—something more than merely
ecological or environmentally correct living. Returning to Earth implies de-
veloping a genuine capacity to live with the profound implications entailed
by the seemingly simple principle of radical interdependence. To return to the
notion of the biology of love (recall that for its proponents this is not a moral
precept but a way to name the structural dynamics of interdependence they
discover at the foundation of all life; call it “care” if you prefer): “The biology of
love, the manner of living with the other [human and nonhuman] in the doings
or behaviors through which the other arises as a legitimate other in coexistence
with oneself, and in which we human beings take total responsibility for our
emotions and for our rational doings, is not a coexistence in appropriation,
control or command” (Maturana and Verden-Zöller 2008, 118).
Living with the Earth within the biology of love supposes a mode of ex-
istence in which relations of mutual care and respect are spontaneously real-
ized—a mode of living that involves our whole life and that can take place only
within what we have called the communal. It means cultivating this principle
not only theoretically but by living it autonomously. It means being actively
cognizant of how “patriarchality through mistrust and control, through ma-
nipulation and appropriation, through domination and submission, interferes
with the biology of love, pushing humans away from the domain of collabo-
ration and mutual respect towards the domain of political alliances, mutual
manipulation, and mutual abuse” (119). Sounds familiar, right? “And as the
biology of love is interfered with, our social life comes to an end” (119; emphasis
Conclusion 219
added). This is because the biology of love is the principle of all successful
sociality. From many territorial groups at present we learn the chief political
implications of this lesson: that the care of communal territories/worlds is the
fundamental political task of our times.19
Let us now look at the second scenario, by most counts the most likely
to gain the upper hand. This is the overcoming and total transcendence
of the organic basis of life dreamed up by the technopatriarchs of the mo-
ment. This scenario necessitates an ongoing legitimation of the ontology
of separation. It would not have such a hold on the popular imagination
were it not for the fact that its pivotal constructs—the individual, markets,
expert knowledge, science, material wealth—are paraded every night for
hours on end on cnn and the like and in the annual rituals of the Davos
men and World Bank and International Monetary Fund economists, as if
they truly represented the fundaments of human life. Be that as it may, the
technological imagination is powerful, even more so perhaps when depict-
ing the final alchemic fantasy of a world that no longer depends on nature.
The entire panoply of biological, material, and digital technologies is placed
at the ser vice of this imaginary. Sure, the bodies of animals and plants might
tolerate a high level of manipulation if certain fundamental cellular fea-
tures are respected, so to this extent these developments may justifiably be
seen as feasible. The corollary of this possibility, however, is, literally, earth-
shattering. A question becomes imperative: “in doing all this, will human-
ness be conserved or lost?” (Maturana and Verden-Zöller 2008, 116). These
authors continue:
Acceptance of the legitimacy of the manipulation of the biosphere in gen-
eral, and of human life in particular, becomes the norm in the ser vice of
technology through the blindness of non-systemic [nonrelational] think-
ing. Does it matter? If technology becomes the most fundamental and
central feature of human endeavors, then indeed it does not matter that
in the technological expansion and complication of human activities
human beingness as Homo sapiens-amans should be lost to be replaced by
the conservation of some new being like Homo sapiens agressans, or Homo
sapiens arrogans, for example. The conservation of some new Homo sapiens
identity will change the course of history, and human beingness as Homo
sapiens-amans shall disappear, or it will remain hidden in some distant
pockets of primitive life. . . . But if loving humanness remains important
and valuable for us as human beings, then technology will not determine
220 Conclusion
human life, and the biology of intimacy [interconnectedness] will not be
lost or destroyed but will be conserved. (119)
We are confronted here with the rise of a posthuman quite different from
that envisioned by posthumanist social theory. The human would not dis-
appear as such, as many environmentalists dread (rightly so), but would mu-
tate into another type of being. The stakes are clear. How shall ontologically
oriented design face the quandaries of life beyond biology? Will designers be
able to resist the seduction of this powerful imaginary? For the technoworlds
created by these imaginations are unfailingly loaded with the promise of un-
limited growth, novelty, power, adventure, and wealth (as if these were the
ultimate criteria of a good life), albeit at the cost of alienating us ever more
from our participation in the life of Earth. Will designers be able to contrib-
ute to dissuading unreflective publics from succumbing to the virtual reali-
ties offered by the patriarchal and capitalistic technological imaginations of
the day?20
Is the fundamental question of design today then about diverging imagina-
tions of the future? One thing is certain, that despite the fact that design has
often maintained an utopian tendency, today’s professional practice of de-
sign has a strong propensity “to abdicate from futuring,” in the face of which
it makes sense for transition designers to counter “with a revived insistence
on design taking responsibility for the futures it materializes” (Tonkinwise
2015, 88). As Fry argues, Sustainment “can only be realized by being constituted
as a project with a specific agenda that is based on a rupture with the telos of
past world-making” (2015, 63; see also Stewart 2015). This notion of the futural
goes against the constitutive teleology of patriarchal capitalist modernity. Per-
haps it is only thus that one can hope to counter the pervasive defuturing of
worlds effected throughout the centuries by the instrumentations of the En-
lightenment project. Moving from the historical (a renewed understanding of
our current ontologies and social systems) to the futural might provide some
openings to address the question of genuinely open futures.
Many people, doubtlessly many environmentalists, feel an immense sad-
ness when confronted with the devastation of life. How can one accept a life
without the anaconda, the jaguar, or the elephant, or so many birds and mil-
lenarian trees, rivers, landscapes, and snowy peaks, or even the smallest living
beings that go unnoticed altogether? How can one think about the reconstruc-
tion of the House of Life (the Ecozoic) so as to avoid such futures? Can one
bring back beauty and harmony into the world, so undermined in the name
Conclusion 221
of urban comfort and efficiency? There is no doubt that beauty—which for
some theorists has actually been an important piece of evolution, perhaps
even its telos (Goodwin 2007; Lubarski 2014)—has been a major victim of
the anthropocene; in fact, one may posit that the systematic exile of beauty
from modern life is one of its most salient dimensions. These, too, are relevant
questions for contemporary design.
Optimistic readings of the anthropocene are of course welcome if they
push against the boundaries of the techno-capitalistic liberal mind-set. Writer
and eco-philosopher Diane Ackerman (2014), for instance, constructs one
such hopeful view based on her analysis of human agency in the face of eco-
logical disasters, focusing on those human responses that for her represent a
rising consciousness of our partaking of the natural world (green-belt cor-
ridors; successful ecosystem restoration programs; recovery of species in
extinction through genetic science; constructive wilderness management
schemes; advances in neuroscience, robotics, nanotechnology, biomateri-
als, and regenerative medicine; and so forth). Such analyses, it seems to
me, need to take into account simultaneously the other side, as it were, of
the kind of global modernity in which we currently live—the dialectic of
the incredible complexity of the current system of global capital under cor-
porate control, on the one hand, and the brutal simplicity of its results, on
the other, the simplicity that condemns millions of people and species to
constant destruction, displacement, incarceration, and expulsion, as Saskia
Sassen (2014) so eloquently has shown. At stake are veritable “predatory
formations” (much more than just rapacious elites) characterized by un-
heard-of systemic capacities that generate sustained expulsions through
novel structures of rule bringing together technological, financial, market,
and legal innovations, a global operational space to which most governments
acquiesce as the said formations go on performing ever more extensive re-
source grabs (of land, water, the biosphere), leaving human and ecological
devastation in their wake. It is these geographies of destruction that we need
to pair with our more optimistic readings of human agency, lest our analyses
end up contributing to more of the same or, worse, widening the space of
the expelled.
We should be clear about something: the anthropocene does not start with
capitalism and modernity (hence, it is not enough to speak about a “capitalo-
cene”); it stems from much farther back. While it might not be appropriate
to speak about a “patriarchocene,” it is important to acknowledge that it was
in the long history of patriarchy that life’s constitutive relationality began to
222 Conclusion
be systematically broken down, and hence it is there that we find the long-
standing source of the crisis.
Conclusion 223
Epistemic decolonization involves critically assessing “which concepts are we
moved by and how we move those concepts and theories that are presupposed
in the decisions that affect us day in and day out” (P. Botero 2013, 44). Within
this perspective—aptly called “collective research and action”—“the commu-
nities are an integral part of knowledge as researchers, and the researchers are
part of the collective doing” (44).22
This reflection gives me pause to return to the location of the present work.
Is not this book also part of the same academy? No doubt it is, in both its
language and its mode of construction. Could it also be part of the decoloniz-
ing effort? Perhaps, although this will depend on the decolonizing practices
and discourses in which it might successfully participate. I want to emphasize,
more than anything, that this book is not another attempt, no matter how
well intentioned, to teach others how to be or what to do, especially not those
communities struggling for their autonomy. They know what to do better than
anybody else. In this sense, the book is not proselytizing nor developmentalist.
I have presented these ideas as a working hypothesis, more pertinent perhaps
for those of us who spend most of our lives in the spaces most directly shaped
by the individualizing and objectifying modern categories, from which we are
ever attempting to disentangle ourselves, with limited success at best. Let us
say, in the spirit of cultural studies, that the ideas contained here are shaped by
my reading of the current conjuncture; it is, however, a historical reading that
pertains to many people and groups, albeit not to all.
224 Conclusion
being, the butterfly. What the cultural correspondences of this metaphor
might mean we can only speculate. (2007, 177)
For some indigenous and other subaltern peoples in Latin America, this great
transformation is none other than the pachakuti: a profound overhaul of the
existing social order, not as a result of a sudden act or a new great synthesis
of knowledge or novel agreements, but of an expansive and steady, albeit dis-
continuous, effort to permanently unsettle and alter the established order. The
pachakuti, or the great cycles of the Mayan calendar, are long-standing con-
cepts of peoples who are strictly contemporaneous, that is, peoples for whom
“there is no ‘post’ nor ‘pre’ because their vision of history is neither linear nor
teleological; it sketches a path without ceasing to return to the same point”
(Rivera Cusicanqui 2014, 6). The pachakuti “evokes an inversion of historical
time, the insurgency of a past and a future that might culminate in catastrophe or
renewal. . . . What is experienced is a change of consciousness and a transforma-
tion in identities, modes of knowing, and modes of conceiving of politics” (6).
It seems daring to apply these concepts to the transitions into which we are
being thrown at present, but I find in them a more constructive way of thinking
about human futures than in the prescriptions in vogue given to us by estab-
lished institutions, such as the impoverished post-2015 sustainable develop-
ment agenda or, even less so, the technological alchemies of the day, which
would most certainly cause even greater destruction of the Earth with their
offering of illusive futures.
Perhaps we can hear the rumblings of the pachakuti in the transition initia-
tives and grassroots struggles for autonomy in so many parts of the world, as in
Arundhati Roy’s poetic evocation of it, “Another world is not only possible, she is
on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing” (quoted in Macy 2007, 17).
For this process to take off on a surer footing, albeit in unpredictable directions,
the dream of fitting all worlds into one has finally to be put on hold.
Epilogue
Rethinking design from the vantage point of relationality, and vice versa, was
a major aspect of this book, as was the proposition that autonomy (again,
in the contemporary Latin American sense, not as found in Kantian moral
philosophy or in classical liberalism) can be an expression of the radical rela-
tionality of life. Together, these two lines of argumentation—on design and
autonomy—allowed me to propose a praxis space generated by the interplay
Conclusion 225
of an ethics of world making and a politics of social existence, and to bring a
processual and relational ethics into design itself and into all we do.
The propositions presented in this book have oscillated between a politics
of the real and a politics of the possible—between pragmatism and utopianism,
if you wish. The politics of the real, as should be clear, redefines the politics
of the possible, and vice versa; this is one of the strong arguments of neorealism.
By adopting a perspective of radical relationality one not only multiplies the
reals but redraws the maps of what is possible. Yet this does not do away with
the dire questions of political strategy posed by the current conjuncture. What
are the best ways of going about the redesign of those institutions that keep
unsustainability, growing inequality, and odious, unacceptable levels of injus-
tice in place? Of Thomas Berry’s (1999) four institutional formations respon-
sible for unsustainability (governments, universities, organized religions, and
corporations), it is clearly the fourth that continues to gain the upper hand—
in fact, one of its major triumphs has been to deploy its central logics in the
midst of the other three, as attested by the steady corporatization of higher
education and the State that has taken place over the past three decades.
There is an imperative need to fight over governments, universities, and
spiritualties by reimagining them through the lens of relationality, lest we con-
tinue to be subject to the logic underlined by Walter Benjamin long ago, that
“even the dead will not be safe from the enemy if he wins. And this enemy has
not ceased to be victorious” (1968, 264). In the same oft-quoted thesis, Benja-
min redefines the politics of the real: “To articulate the past historically does
not mean to seize it ‘as it really was’. . . . It means to seize hold of a memory as
it flashes up in a moment of danger. . . . In every era the attempt must be made
anew to wrest tradition anew from a conformism that is about to overpower
it” (265). Tell this to the coalition of Native Americans at the Standing Rock
Sioux reservation so courageously and brilliantly opposing the construction
of the Dakota Access Pipeline; they have long known what it means to be the
victims of naturalized traditions of dominance, for they have faced a politics
of genocide and erasure that seems never to come to an end, an enemy that
continues to be victorious. Through their struggle, they summon the past in
order to shake up our established politics of the possible and the real.
The return of the Right occurring in so many countries on every continent
is not so much an indication that the immediately preceding regimes were
much better—they stemmed from the same traditions Benjamin spoke about,
those of dominant modernities—but of the pains to which such traditions
go to achieve self-reproduction. The resulting structures of rule being set in
226 Conclusion
place at present might end up being even more exclusionary and damaging
than those they are seeking to replace; if this proves to be the case, nineteenth-
and twentieth-century modernity would indeed look in retrospect like benign,
well-intentioned, and enlightened social orders, as their founders and defenders
claim. Nevertheless, as the social basis for dispossession widens (proliferating
extractivism, truly massive displacement and expulsion, xenophobia, growing
incarceration . . . ), so do the fields of potential antagonisms multiply, and thus
so might the seeds of potentially important transformations.
This is the source from which the digna rabia (rightful anger) springs, the
forceful outrage that so many people, from all walks of life, feel in Donald
Trump’s United States, Mauricio Macri’s Argentina, or Michel Temer’s Brazil, to
speak only of the most flagrant cases in the Americas. Thinking about the ef-
fective redesign of institutions in this context becomes one of the most press-
ing cultural-political projects in which the academy can engage; at its best, it
will do it by joining forces with on-the-ground struggles fighting for justice
and the active acknowledgment of the value of all forms of life in the world.
Conclusion 227
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Notes
Introduction
1 This kind of two-way introduction to concepts and literatures might frustrate some read-
ers wishing for more in-depth treatment of one or another aspect of the concepts and
trends reviewed. I will point to additional readings in notes when appropriate for those
wishing to follow up on the debates in question.
2 The title of the Spanish edition of this book is actually Autonomía y diseño: La realización
de lo communal (Autonomy and design: The realization of the communal). Readers ac-
quainted with Maturana and Varela’s work will realize that this subtitle mimics that of
their book Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living (1980). In the preface to
the second edition of the Spanish original (entitled De máquinas y seres vivos), Maturana
explains, however, that the book’s full title should have been Autopoiesis: La organización
de lo vivo (Autopoiesis: The Organization of the Living) (Maturana 1994, 9).
3 “Real Situation” is the second track from the lp Uprising (Bob Marley & The Wailers.
Kingston, Jamaica: Tuff Gong Studio/Island Records, 1980).
4 This and other translations are my own. Quotes from Illich are from a recently reedited
version of the Spanish-language edition first published in 1978 (Illich 2015), although
slightly modified by me in some instances after comparison with the English text. For
the English-language version, see Illich (1973). The book was based on essays originally
written in Spanish and some notes in English, which were eventually published in both
languages, with some differences between the editions (Gustavo Esteva, personal com-
munication, November 20, 2015).
5 Contrary to what could be gathered from Illich’s reputation, Illich was not antitechnol-
ogy per se. In his view, many tools (say, the telephone, formal education, and, we may
Chapter 1: Out of the Studio and into the Flow of Socionatural Life
Epigraphs: Mau and the Institute without Boundaries, Massive Change (2004), 23; T.
Brown, Change by Design (2009), 3; Manzini, Design, When Everybody Designs (2015), 1, 31.
1 The following wonderful quote from a text from 1973 by Georges Perec (which recalls
Norbert Elias) may suffice to illustrate this point about the intimacy of design and every-
Epigraphs: Anne-Marie Willis, “Transition Design: The Need to Refuse Discipline and Tran-
scend Instrumentalism” (2015), 72–73; Caroline Gatt and Tim Ingold, “From Descrip-
tion to Correspondence: Anthropology in Real Time” (2013), 147; Michel Foucault, The
Order of Things (1970), 373, 378, 386.
1 Following Grossberg, too, I differentiate this project from cds, as discussed in the previ-
ous chapter. As Grossberg (2010) underscores, the project of cultural studies goes be-
yond critique to embrace the specificity of the concrete. It examines design’s intricate
location within formations of culture and power but also ways it might contribute to
other world-making projects. A cultural studies of design also differs from cds because
of the centrality of culture and, as we shall add in this book, ontology in the former.
2 There are parallel trends in geography, which I cannot review here; one of the more noted
is GeoDesign, as a practice that brings geographic analysis (ecological, spatial, gis, mod-
eling) into design.
3 The preconference publication prototype in 2010 was coordinated by Christopher Kelty,
Alberto Corsín Jiménez, and George Marcus. On the history, concept, and uses of pro-
totypes from design (rather than anthropological) perspectives, see the contributions by
Michael Guggenheim, Alex Wilkie, and Nerea Calvillo in this collection of short essays
(arc Studio 2010).
4 See the project’s website, “Rethinking Ethnography as a Design Process,” Center for Eth-
nography, uci School of Social Science, http://www.ethnography.uci.edu/programs
/design.php, and Murphy (2016) for a more satisfactory review of this trend.
5 Introductory remarks for the session, “Design for the Real World: But Which World?
What Design? What Real?,” American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting,
San Francisco, November 14, 2012.
6 There are several interesting groups working at the anthropology/design intersection
(for instance, a three-day workshop at Aberdeen in 2009 on design anthropology, con-
vened by James Leach and Caroline Gatt, and an interdisciplinary group bringing to-
gether scholars from the Parsons School of Design and Cornell University on the subject
of Ecology, Critical Thought, and Design). The next few years will surely see a number of
new volumes at the intersection of anthropology, ecology, and design.
Epigraphs: Maturana and Varela, The Tree of Knowledge: The Biological Roots of Human
Understanding (1987), 241; Plumwood, Environmental Culture: The Ecological Crisis of
Reason (2002), 4–5; Albán Achinte, Más allá de la razón hay un mundo de colores (2013).
1 A word about the authors in question: the three main ones are Humberto Maturana,
Francisco Varela, and Fernando Flores. Maturana and Varela are known as the origina-
tors, beginning in the late 1960s, of the Chilean school of cognitivism. Their main in-
tervention has been to propose a theory of cognition that contrasts sharply with estab-
lished positions. Beyond cognition, they have proposed an entire conceptual framework
for understanding living beings, based on the notion of autopoiesis (self-creation). As
they state in their landmark study (1980; originally published in Spanish in 1973), their
Epigraphs: Virilio, The Administration of Fear (2012), 46, 72; Willis, “Ontological Designing—
Laying the Ground” (2006), 80; Winograd and Flores, Understanding Computers and
Cognition (1986), xi.
Epigraphs: Irwin, “Transition Design: A Proposal for a New Era of Design Practice, Study
and Research” (2015), 1, 4; Tonkinwise, “Design’s (Dis)Orders and Transition Design”
(2014), 12; Manzini, Design, When Everybody Designs: An Introduction to Design for Social
Innovation (2015), 2.
1 I use the term transition rather than transformation since that is the actual term used
by most of the frameworks discussed here. Some of the tds can be criticized on many
grounds (e.g., their lack of attention to questions of power and domination in terms of
class, gender, and race, or their continued reliance on modernist premises). However,
most imply a radical notion of transformation at many levels. In some cases, the mean-
ing of transition is similar to Karl Polanyi’s (1957) notion of “the great transformation”;
in others, a transition is seen as entailing many types of transformation. Most exhibit a
profound open-endedness and awareness of being one of many possible stories. In con-
trast to well-known areas of transition research in the social sciences (e.g., transitions to
postsocialism, postcapitalism, or postconflict), the tds presented here bracket straightfor-
ward teleologies, even if they, too, tell a story with a “from” and a “toward.” Some explicitly
appeal to nonlinear dynamics, emergence, and self-organization.
2 The tds cited here represent a segment of the literature. They range from the more cultural
and spiritual to the explicitly political; they appeal to a broad array of concepts and tropes,
from the dystopian (collapse, decline and descent, survival, apocalypse, etc.) to the recon-
structive (e.g., conscious evolution, collective intelligence, sacredness, saving the planet
and humans, and so forth). There is lots to be learned from these visions and proposals,
which academics and designers rarely consider. The entire field of spiritual ecology can be
seen as a space for tds.
3 The Great Transition Initiative is a network devoted to the systematic study and promo-
tion of transition ideas and strategies, housed at the Tellus Institute in Boston. Its origins
date back to 1995, with the creation of the Global Scenario Group by Paul Raskin and
the Argentinean modeling expert Gilberto Gallopín. See the initiative’s website, http://
www.greattransition.org/.
4 This is an exciting and growing area, even in some critical strands of the academy. Within
the West, it has predecessors in the works of Vladimir Vernadsky and Pierre Teilhard de
Chardin, among others, but also in the traditions of immanence, vitalism, and process
thought. It should be emphasized that a sentient universe is a core idea—indeed, a reality—
in many indigenous cosmologies.
5 See the work of the Center for Ecozoic Societies in Chapel Hill (http://www.ecozoic
societies.org/), directed by Herman Greene, which is largely devoted to Berry’s work.
6 Berry actually posited a definition of the anthropocene avant la lettre; in an essay from
1988, beautifully entitled The Dream of the Earth, he wrote, “We are acting on a geologi-
Epigraphs: Zapatista slogan included at the end of the “Ten Principles of Good Gov-
ernment” at the entrance of one of the Zapatista autonomous communities (see “Junta
del Buen Gobierno Corazón del Arco Iris,” August 9, 2012, from the website of the
Confederación General del Trabajo [cgt-España], Chiapas, http://www.cgtchiapas.org
/denuncias-juntas-buen-gobierno-denuncias/jbg-morelia-denuncia-ataque-orcao-con
-arma-fuego-bases); Olver Quijano, “Cambiar el mundo no viene ni de arriba ni de afuera.
Resumen del Congreso Tramas y Mingas por el Buen Vivir, Popayán, Junio 9-11, 2013”
(Quijano 2013); Varela, Ethical Know-How: Action, Wisdom, and Cognition (1999), 11.
1 This point is made by the legendary systems theorist Stafford Beer, who worked with
Flores on Project Cybersyn during the Allende presidency in Chile, in his preface to Mat-
urana and Varela’s Autopoiesis and Cognition (1980). Project Cybersyn was a pioneering
The opening poem was translated by John Chasteen, Department of History, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
1 Remark made at one of the events on the Mexican crisis convened under the rubric “De-
fending Our Common House,” organized by Gustavo Esteva and held in Mexico City on
November 16–21, 2015. The Rarámuri were formerly known as Tarahumara.
2 “Lo que vamos aprendiendo con la Liberación de Uma Kiwe,” from the website of the
Tejido de Comunicación Asociación de Cabildos del Norte del Cauca, http://anterior.
nasaacin .org /index .php /nuestra -palabra /7987 -lo - que -vamos -aprendiendo - con -la
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3 “Lo que vamos aprendiendo.”
4 “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds. . . .
Won’t you help to sing these songs of freedom, it’s all I ever had, redemption songs.” From
the album Uprising (1980).
5 Yet one finds statements critical of capitalism in the transition design literature, for in-
stance, from Cameron Tonkinwise: “Within design thinking there is an idealistic drive
toward anti-capitalism, or at least anti-business-as-usual” (2012, 14). At the same time, the
same author warns that design “tends to be ameliorative rather than politically pursuing
structural change” (2015, 87).
6 This idea has found a recent lucid expression in the domain of insurrectionary politics:
“The biggest problem we face is a philosophical one: understanding that this civilization
is already dead. . . . [Its end] has been clinically established for a century” (Invisible Com-
mittee 2015, 29). Talk of crisis is a surrogate for the realization that it is the West that is the
catastrophe—nobody is out to destroy the West; it is destroying itself.
7 I owe the idea of extending Gibson-Graham’s analysis of capitalism to modernity to
Nicolás Sánchez, who suggested it in one of the sessions of my Anthropology of Design
graduate seminar in the spring of 2016.
8 My concern with the risks of pluralizing modernity has benefited greatly from discussions
with friends in several parts of the world. These friends rightly point, conversely, at two risks
in the pluriversal position: the alterization of difference (locating difference, and hope for
change, in the more clearly identifiable subaltern groups, such as ethnic minorities) and the
tendency to treat modernity as hegemonic and homogeneous. All worlds have to be histo-
ricized deeply—all worlds (whether traditional or modern) contain a judicious mix of the
good, the bad, and the ugly.
9 Nandy’s remark was made in reference to Gandhi. For Nandy, one of the paradoxical im-
plications of Gandhi’s thought was that “it is more civil not to be civilized in the modern
sense” (Nandy 1987, 146).
10 The ritual of la ombligada (ombligo means “navel”) refers to the act of burying the umbili-
cal cord and the placenta after a child is born near the house or under a tree by the edge
of the forest (for girls and boys, respectively). The navel of the newborn is subsequently
filled with a pulverized natural substance—animal, plant, or mineral—in such a way as to
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Index
282 Index
240n25, 255n30, 257n13; transition design Dakota Access Pipeline, 66
for, 194–99 Dalai Lama, 243n18
commoning, 16, 144–47, 151, 176, 198–200; Dávila, Arlene, 255n25
autonomy and, 175, 178, 188; reclaiming Dávila Yáñez, Ximena, 232n9
of, 69–70, 223; Transition Town Initia- decolonial theory, 11, 46, 80, 133–34, 217;
tive and, 138, 140–41 design and, 117, 206–8; economic
communal, 116, 162, 176–84, 200–201, 208–9; development and, 62; epistemology and,
autonomous design and, 74, 134, 168, 94, 97–99, 206, 223–24, 250n17; feminist,
171, 184–90, 187, 189; commitment to, 21; 65–66, 176, 182–83, 231n6; individualism
definition of, 219; individual versus, 146, and, 85; interdisciplinary, 166; Mignolo
157, 168; rethinking of, 5 on, 205; political ontology and, 52;
communality, 175–78, 200–201; autonomy postcolonialism and, 42, 46, 80, 243n12;
and, 166; definition of, 177; globalization’s Varela on, 81
destruction of, 174; realization of, 176–84 degrowth, 90, 144–51; autonomous design
complexity theory, 83, 94, 115; critical social and, 188; commons and, 140, 188; Illich
theory and, 156, 170–71, 243n15, 252n5; on, 9; transition frameworks for, 96, 138,
Goodwin on, 224–25, 236n25; Leff on, 197–98, 206. See also developmentalism
124; Taylor on, 170, 252n4 de la Cadena, Marisol, xiii, 66–67, 95,
computationalist model, 43, 80 216–18; on commons, 146; on political
computers, 35, 41–43, 55, 229n2; cybernetics ontology, 238n14
and, 87–88, 251n1; design of, 115, 235n17; Deleuze, Gilles, 21, 71, 103–4, 239n20
manufacture of, 107–8; social media and, Deloria, Vine, 97
106, 111 Demaria, Federico, 148
Coplanacu (music duo), 247n20 Descartes, René. See Cartesianism
Corsín Jiménez, Alberto, 55, 237n3 Descola, Philippe, 64, 102
cosmopolitan localism, 137, 159, 163, 208 “design designs,” 4, 110–11, 131
critical design studies, 2–3, 130, 198–99; “designer man,” 52–53
architecture and, 36–37; critical social Design for Social Innovation and Sustain-
theory and, 27, 50–51, 54; definition of, ability Network, 250n20
17; digitalization and, 41; ontological Design Studio for Social Intervention, 58,
design and, 132; speculative design and, 238n7, 238n8
45–46, 54–55; sustainability and, 33, 90; design thinking, 34, 36, 46, 48, 60–62;
technology and, 18, 26; transition think- Berglund on, 57; Brown on, 2, 25, 234n13;
ing and, 152–53 Gutiérrez Borrero on, 206; Marcus on,
critical social theory, 27, 50–51, 54, 246n12; 55–56; Scharmer on, 125–26; Stewart on,
complexity theory and, 156, 170–71, 15; Tonkinwise on, 123, 132, 256n5
243n15, 252n5 developmentalism, 6–7, 95, 177, 224, 245n7;
Crystal Palace Exhibition (1851), 31 agriculture and, 66; alternatives to, 90,
cultural studies, 76, 80, 224; of design, 3, 19, 96, 147–48, 154, 161–62, 205–9; autonomy
46–51, 128, 237n1 and, 167, 172–73, 184; in Bolivia, 254n17;
cybernetics, 87–88, 96, 108–9, 241n1, 251n1 in Cauca Valley, 190–201; coloniality and,
cyberspace, 35, 41–42, 108, 146, 245n5 31, 94; critics of, 242n8, 246n12, 250n17;
cyborgs, 17, 258n18 defuturing projects and, 190–91; design
Index 283
developmentalism (continued) epistemologies, 34; autonomous design
in, 59–62, 65, 184–88, 187; globalization and, 184; decolonial theory and, 94,
and, 65, 83, 141, 172; governmentality and, 97–99, 206, 223–24, 250n17; definitions
60; heteronomous, 32, 173; Life Plans and, of, 92, 242n11; Gutiérrez Borrero on, 206;
73–75, 173, 251n23; technological, 18, 31–32, Ochoa Gautier on, 130; positivist, 80, 88,
116, 231n8. See also degrowth; sustainability 107, 242n11; poststructuralist, 92, 96, 97,
development studies, 51–52, 76, 166 115, 243n15; Sharma on, 212; of the South,
Dewey, John, 56, 102, 123 67–69, 250n17
Díaz Gómez, Floriberto, 254n16 Espinosa, Yuderkis, 239n17
Dilnot, Clive, 18 Esteva, Gustavo, 172–74, 177
Dina Zape, Luis Enrique, 255n24 etc Group, 236n24
DiSalvo, Carl, 47 Eurocentrism, 67–69, 81, 93–95; anthropo-
Doctors without Borders, 60 centrism and, 64, 95, 243n16; of design,
Domínguez Rubio, Fernando, 58, 59 133, 206–7; Fry on, 6
Dreyfus, Hubert, 112, 123
dualism. See ontological dualism Fals Borda, Orlando, xii
Dunne, Anthony, 17 fashion design, 37, 44, 230n6
Dylan, Bob, ix, 7 feminisms, 7–8, 46, 88, 127, 219; commu-
nitarian, 11–13, 19, 182–83; decolonial
Earth Summit, 43 theory and, 65–66, 176, 182–83, 231n6;
EarthWalk Alliance, 234n16 ecofeminism and, 239n15; on matriarchy/
ecofeminism, 239n15. See also feminisms patriarchy, 12–13, 19, 93–94, 231n7;
ecological civilization, 141, 144, 189, 249n7 “negofeminism” and, 64–65; universal
ecological design, 36–37, 43–45, 116, 120, design and, 45
208; Ehrenfeld on, 122; permaculture feminist political ecology (fpe), 51–52,
and, 236n23 64–66, 146, 250n17
ecological economics, 63, 132, 145, 229n1, Fletcher, Kate, 44
234n9. See also green economy Flores, Fernando, 92, 92, 105, 110, 123; on
Ecozoic era, 140, 143–44, 164, 189, 221, 248n5 ontological design, xiv, 42, 116, 241n1; on
Ecuador, 149, 174, 176, 177, 253n8; Buen Vivir organizational theory, 245n8; on Project
and, 249n10; community life projects in, Cybersyn, 251n1
186, 187; constitution of, 148 Fogué, Uriel, 58, 59
Ehn, Pelle, 35, 47 Foster, Hal, 26, 37
Ehrenfeld, John, 45, 122–23, 246nn12–13 Foucault, Michel, xiii, 80, 97; on biopower,
Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional 119; on ethnology, 50, 53; on governmen-
(ezln), 173–74 talization, 32; on logics of power, 58;
El Cigala, Diego, 247n20 popular communications and, 229n2
elimination design, 6–7, 118, 157–58 Frankfurt school, 233n6, 246n12
Ellul, Jacques, 231n5 Freire, Paulo, xii
Engles, Friedrich, 231n6 Fromm, Erich, 231n5, 246n12
episteme, 48, 52, 92, 216, 243nn15–17; Fry, Tony, 110, 119–21; on anthropocene,
definition of, 242n11; ecological, 124; 120, 207; on climate change, 44, 119, 121;
unsettling of, 97 on economic growth, 90; on elimina-
284 Index
tion design, 157–58; on Koolhaas, 37; on Guattari, Félix, 21, 71, 103–4, 239n20
ontological design, 117; on Sustainment, Gudynas, Eduardo, 151, 249n10
16–17, 138, 140, 221; on types of human Guerrero, Arturo, 177, 178, 180
beings, 246n14; on urban design, 40–41 Gutiérrez Aguilar, Raquel, 177–80
Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Co- Gutiérrez Borrero, Alfredo, 206
lombia (farc), 72
Fundación HablaScribe, 229n2 Habermas, Jürgen, 32, 80
futurality, 9, 71, 188–90, 189 Halpin, Harry, 42, 96, 236n22
Haraway, Donna, 52, 64, 80
Gadamer, Hans-Georg, 241n2, 245n6 Harcourt, Wendy, 65
Gallopín, Gilberto, 248n3 Hartblay, Cassandra, 236n27
Gandhi, Mohandas K., 256n9 Hathaway Mark, 142
García Canclini, Néstor, 229n2 Hawken, Paul, 44, 236n23
García Márquez, Gabriel, 27–31 Hegel, G. W. F., 20
Gatt, Caroline, 49, 52, 56–57, 237n6 Heidegger, Martin, xiii, 20–21, 42, 80; on
Gehry, Frank, 37 “Age of the World Picture,” 131; sustain-
GeoDesign, 237n2 ment and, 117; on technology, 18; termi-
geoengineering, 236n24 nology of, 241n2; on tradition, 245n6
Gibson, William, 245n5 Helfrich, Silke, 140, 146, 147
Gibson-Graham, J. K., 210, 239n15, 244n3, heteronomy, 32, 172–75, 178, 181, 188
250n17, 256n7 homeless shelters, 58
Giddens, Anthony, 80, 246n12 Hopkins, Rob, 144–45
globalization, 83, 139, 239n19; destruction Hosminen, Samuli, 247n20
of communality by, 174; domination of, humanitarian aid, 59–62
69; Eurocentrism and, 206–7; Zapatistas Huxley, Aldous, 250n14
on, 86, 174
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 102 ideo (design firm), 36
Goodman, Alan, 229n3 Illich, Ivan, 7–10, 200, 211; popular com-
Goodman, Paul, 231n5 munications and, 229n2; on social transi-
Goodwin, Brian, xii, 102, 236n25 tions, 139; on technology, 230n5
Grameen Bank (Bangladesh), 61, 238n10 Indignados movement, 69, 172
“Great Singularity,” 17 individualism, 83–85, 90–91, 183, 246n15,
Great Transition Initiative, 140–42, 154, 251n22
248n3 industrial design, 1, 32–34, 206, 233n6
Greene, Herman, 141, 144, 248n5 Ingold, Tim, 29, 49, 52, 56–57, 102; on One-
green economy, 43–45, 95, 103, 118, 149–50, World World, 87; on political ecology, 64
236n24. See also ecological economics innovation, 2, 7, 18, 58, 129, 196; design, 31,
Gropius, Walter, 233n6 38, 47, 60, 130, 132; Manzini on, 152–53;
Grose, Lynda, 44 open-source, 234n13; social, 5, 27, 67, 138,
Grossberg, Lawrence, 51, 237n1 145, 159–64; sustainable, 123, 158, 207, 215;
Grupo de Académicos e Intelectuales technological, 25, 30, 110, 208, 247n17
en Defensa del Pacífico Colombiano, Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals
xvii–xviii (icta), 249n9
Index 285
Institute for Money, Technology and Finan- Leff, Enrique, 95, 123–24, 211, 238n13
cial Inclusion, 238n10 Leidy, Lynnette, 229n3
Institute for Postmodern Development, 144 Lévy, Pierre, xiv
interaction design, 35, 58–59 Liberación de la Madre Tierra, 14, 73–75, 203,
Irwin, Terry, 137, 153, 156, 158 255n30
Life Plans (Planes de Vida), x, 73–75,
James, William, 102 166–67, 173, 175; definition of, 251n23;
jazz, 248n21 ethnic territories and, 186–88, 187
Jobs, Steve, xv, 108 living-systems theory, 44, 139, 142–43,
Johnson, Norris, 40 154–55, 155, 169–72, 250n17. See also
Johnstone, Chris, 127, 143 systems thinking
Joy, Leonard, xii logocentrism, 48, 80, 83; academic prose
Juntas de Buen Gobierno, 174 and, 243n17; feminism and, 88; Varela
on, 97–98
Kaje, Ritva, xii Lorentz, Konrad, 229n2
Kamal, Saydia, 258n17 Lovelock, James, 229n2
Kankuamo people (Colombia), 74–75, 176 Lovins, Amory, 44
Kant, Immanuel, 20, 225 Lucian of Samosata, 102
Karim, Lamia, 238n10 Lugones, María, 239n17
Katari, Tupac, 178–79 Luhmann, Niklas, 252n4
Kaufer, Katrin, 125–26 Lunenfeld, Peter, 26
Kirshnamurti, Jiddu, 102
Klein, Naomi, ix, 149 Macy, Joanna, 127–28, 141, 143
Kogui people (Colombia), 74–75, 176 Maldonado, Tomás, 115
Kommonen, Kari-Hans, 41, 194, 195 Mamani, Pablo, 179
Koolhaas, Rem, 37, 39 Manzini, Ezio, xvi, 2, 130, 251n24; on
Kossoff, Gideon, 154–55 cosmopolitan localism, 137; on design
Kronos Quartet, 247n20 for social innovation, 33, 138, 159–64; on
Kurzweil, Ray, 232n12 individualism, 85; on transition design,
Kwinter, Sanford, 26–27 151–52, 249n12
Mapuche people, 16, 157
“Laboratory of Speculative Ethnography,” Marcos, Subcomandante (Rafael Sebastián
238n8 Guillén Vincente), 173
La Toma community (Colombia), Marcus, George, 55–56, 237n3
71–72, 192, 195. See also Cauca Valley Marcuse, Herbert, 231n5
(Colombia) Margulis, Lynn, 81, 229n2
Latour, Bruno, 64, 80, 93 Marley, Bob, 7, 205
Laurel, Brenda, xiv, 41, 48 Márquez, Francia, 72
Law, John, 64, 66, 86, 131 Martínez-Alier, Joan, 63, 149
Leach, James, 237n6 Martínez Luna, Jaime, 254n16
Leatherman, Tom, 229n3 Marttila, Sanna, 194, 195
Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret- Marvin, Carolyn, 31
Gris), 234n7 Marxism, 20, 46, 62–63, 83, 229n2, 244n19
286 Index
Masaharu, Takasaki, 235n17 Nasa people (Colombia), 73, 176, 199,
Massey, Doreen, 82 240n25
“matristic cultures,” 12–14, 17, 19, 232n9. See “natural design,” 119, 184, 236n25
also feminisms “negofeminism,” 64–65
Matríztica School (Santiago de Chile), 232n9 neoliberalism. See globalization
Maturana, Humberto, xii, 3, 33, 79, 205, nepantleras, 65, 200–201
232n9; on autopoiesis, xiv, 5, 168–72, Nhat Hanh, Thich, 244n20
183; on biology of love, 13, 83, 171, 241n1; Nicholas of Cusa, 102
on cognition, 42, 81, 240n1, 252n1; on Nietzsche, Friedrich, 80, 246n10
interconnected communities, 213–14; on Nilsson, Elizabeth, 35, 47
“matristic cultures,” 12–14; on rational- Nono, Luigi, 247n20, 248n21
ism, 82; on structural coupling, 169 Nonuya people (Colombia), 257n13
Mau, Bruce, 25, 233n2, 234n15 Northern Cauca. See Cauca Valley
Max-Neef, Manfred, 246n12 (Colombia)
McHarg, Ian, 43
McLuhan, Marshall, 229n2 Oaxaca, 173–74, 177, 253n8
Médecins sans Frontières, 60 Occupy movement, 69, 172
Mellor, Mary, 239n15 Ochoa Gautier, Ana María, 130
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, 241n2, 245n4 O’Connor, James, xiii
microentrepreneur programs, 61, 238n10 Octavio, León, 257n14
Mies, Maria, 231n6, 239n15 Odum, Howard, 229n2
Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig, 233n6 ombligada ritual, 72, 213, 240n24, 256n10
Mignolo, Walter, 205, 257n12 One-World World (oww), 66–68, 71;
Millennium Development Goals, 61, 238n11 Ingold on, 87; Law on, 66, 86, 131
Misak people (Colombia), 73–74, 240n25 ontological design, 48, 110–16, 131–34, 189;
modernity, 83–91; critical analysis of, 80; agency and, 124–26; Ehrenfeld on, 45;
design and, 32; Eurocentric, 67–68, 81, Flores on, xiv, 42, 116, 241n1; Fry on, 117
93; Nandy on, 128; ontological dualism ontological dualism, 43, 53, 81, 92–96, 104,
and, 3, 19–20; pluriverse and, 129, 200, 213; Deleuze on, 103–4; ecology and, 70,
256n8; Santos on, 68; Varela on, 97–100; 85–86; modernity and, 3, 11, 19–20. See
von Werlhof on, 14 also Cartesianism
Monnin, Alexandre, 42, 96, 236n22 ontological turn in social theory, 20, 41, 52,
Montaner, Josep Maria, 234n14 63–64, 124–25, 216
Montoya, Michael, 59 ontonomy, 32, 172–73, 178, 184
Morales, Evo, 178, 179 Operational closure, 169, 171, 183, 253n6
Morgan, Lynn, 229n3
Moscovici, Serge, 229n2 Pallasmaa, Juhani, 39
Mumford, Lewis, 231n5 Pandey, Gyanendra, 53
Murphy, Keith, 47, 53–54 Papanek, Victor, 1, 235n16, 254n20
music, design and, 129–31 Paredes, Julieta, 11, 182–83
Paredes Pinda, Adriana, 157
Nandy, Ashis, 89, 99–100, 128–29, 242n8, Parikka, Jussi, 244n3
256n9 Pascal, Blaise, 102
Index 287
patriarchy, 63, 170, 183, 218–23; autonomous postextractivism, 138, 140, 145, 150–51, 166–67
thought and, 16–18, 204, 209; of capitalist poststructuralism, 46, 63, 88, 234n14; com-
modernity, 3–4, 10–15, 20, 52, 107–8, 139; plexity theories and, 252n4; epistemolo-
nondualist ontology and, 85–86, 91–94, gies and, 92, 96, 97, 115, 243n15; Marxism
213–14 and, 156; systems thinking and, 170,
Patzi Paco, Félix, 179–81 250n17, 252n4
Pedrosa, Alvaro, 229n2 “presencing,” 123, 125–26, 246n13, 246n15
Peirce, Charles, 123 Proceso de Comunidades Negras (pcn),
Perec, Georges, 232n1 xiv, xvii, 187, 254n19, 255n29
permaculture, 236n23 Project Cybersyn, 251n1
Pink Floyd (music group), 258n20 Puig de la Bellacasa, María, 247n17
placenta, burial of, 72, 213, 240n24, 256n10
Planes de Vida. See Life Plans (Planes de Raby, Fiona, 17
Vida) Rams, Dieter, 233n6
Plumwood, Val, 79, 94–95, 133–34, 211 Rarámuri people, 256n1
pluriverse, 4–7, 117, 170–71, 190; autonomy of, Raskin, Paul, 141, 248n3
175, 184; bioregionalism and, 5, 45, 142, 143, Reagan, Ronald, 7
196; definitions of, xvi, 257n15; design for, realism, 85–88, 90–92, 213, 218; economic,
198; dialogic, 52, 161; Gutiérrez Borrero on, 197; materialism and, 170; postdual-
205–6; of interculturality, 181; invisibility ist, 96; pragmatism and, 226. See also
of, 68; Manzini on, 130, 164, 208; Maturana Cartesianism
on, 205; modernity and, 129, 200, 256n8; Redclift, Michael, 238n13
political ontology and, 66–70, 86, 94–95, Redfield, Peter, 60
216–18; rationality and, 211; risks in, 256n8; Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and
sustainability and, 59, 189; transitions Forest Degradation (redd) projects,
toward, 15–17, 188; Zhang on, 131 149, 176
Pohjonen, Kimmo, 247n20 “refashionistas,” 230n6
Polanyi, Karl, 145, 242n9, 248n1 Reichert, Evânia, 232n9
political ecology (pe), 3, 62–67, 76, 186; fem- Rein, Martin, 56
inist, 51–52, 65–66, 146, 250n17; Leff on, relationality: autonomy and, 171, 178, 204;
124; postdualist, 64; schools of, 238n12 biology of love and, 83, 216; ecology
political ontology (po), 65–69; Blaser on, and, 12; feminism and, 65; music and,
66; de la Cadena on, 238n14; definition 130; nature/culture divide and, 100–104;
of, 65–66; epistemologies and, 67–69, nondualism and, 20–21, 157; political
216; of ethnoterritorial struggles, 69–76, activation of, 95–97; presencing and, 125
186–88, 187; pluriverse and, 66–70, 86, relational ontologies, 129–31
94–95, 216–18 Research Institute for the Critique of
Pollini, Murizio, 247n20 Patriarchy and for Alternative Civiliza-
Portuondo, Omara, 230n5 tions, 231n6
postcolonialism, 42, 46, 80, 243n12. See also Restrepo, Eduardo, 102
decolonial theory Rivera Cusicanqui, Silvia, 129, 178–79, 225,
postdevelopment, 138–40, 143–51, 189, 190, 231n7, 253n15
208, 249n10 Rodríguez, Abel, 257n13
288 Index
Rodríguez, Carlos, 257n13 and, 44; ngos for, 238n9. See also
Rosch, Eleanor, 98 developmentalism
Rose, Deborah Bird, 99, 103–4 Sustainment, 117–18; autonomous design
of, 184–88, 187, 189; Fry on, 16–17, 138,
Sachs, Jeffrey, 179, 238n11 140, 221
Sagan, Dorion, 81, 97 Sweedlund, Alan, 229n3
Salleh, Ariel, 239n15 systems thinking, 35, 62, 114, 127, 170–71;
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa, 67, 102 cognitivism and, 241n1; pioneers of,
Sarlo, Beatriz, 233n4 xii; poststructuralism and, 170, 250n17,
Sassen, Sakia, 222, 239n19 252n4; transition design and, 152–63, 155.
Scharmer, Otto, 125–26 See also living-systems theory
Schön, Donald, 56
School for Designing a Society, 238n8 TallBear, Kimberly, 97
Schwittay, Anke, 61, 238n10 Tanizaki, Junichiro, 39–40, 235n19
Segato, Rita, 11 Tarahumara people, 256n1
Senge, Peter, 246n15 Taylor, Charles, 80
Sharma, Kriti, 91, 101, 244n20; on contin- Taylor, Mark, 170, 252n4
gentism, 212, 257n11 Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre, 248n4
Shaw, Carolyn, 64–65 Tellus Institute, 140
Shepard, Courtney, 230n6 Tennessee Valley Authority, 190, 194
Sheshadry, C. V., 242n8 Thackara, John, 234n9, 234n11
Shiva, Vandana, 142, 239n15 Thatcher, Margaret, 7
Simon, Herbert, 33 Theories of Change, 155, 156, 250n17
Singer, Merrill, 229n3 Thomas, Brooke, 229n3
Sioux, 66 Thompson, Evan, 98
Smith, Linda Tuhiwai, 243n17 tiny house movement, 38, 234n16
social-practice theory, 250n17 Titmarsh, Mark, 124
sociology of absences, 68 toilet designs, 46, 246n13
socionatural space, 178 Tonkinwise, Cameron, 119, 124; on “cy-
Soleri, Paolo, 235n16 borgian singularity,” 258n18; on design
speculative design, 17, 45–46, 54–55 thinking, 123, 132; on ethical design,
Spinosa, Charles, 112, 123 250n18; on transition design, 137, 157, 221,
Spinoza, Baruch, 102 250n18, 256n5
Stack (“accidental megastructure”), 42–43, Topgaard, Richard, 35, 47
108 transition design, 4–9, 27, 47–49, 57, 124;
Stewart, Susan, 15 anthropology and, 51, 208–9; at Carnegie
Stiegler, Bernard, 236n22 Mellon University, 152–58, 155; in Cauca
Strathern, Marilyn, 64, 102 Valley, 191–201; cosmopolitan localism
structural coupling, 169, 171, 173, 183, 188 and, 159, 208; definitions of, 137; emerg-
Suchman, Lucy, 57, 245n8 ing spaces for, 144–47; framings of,
sumak kawsay/suma qamaña. See Buen Vivir 148–58, 155; liberation of Mother Earth
sustainability, 59, 225; Albán on, 33–34; as, 203–5; Manzini on, 151–52, 249n12;
by design, 43–46; fashion industry names for, 138; ontological, 188, 189;
Index 289
transition design (continued) Virilio, Paul, xiv, 105, 108–9; on progress,
social innovation and, 67, 215; Theories 231n8; on technologies, 231n5, 244n4
of Change and, 250n17; Tonkinwise on, virtual reality, 35, 41
137, 157, 221, 250n18, 256n5; Willis on, 49, Visvanathan, Shiv, 242n8
50, 223 Viveiros de Castro, Eduardo, 102; on “con-
transition discourses (tds), 138–43, 164, trolled equivocations,” 258n16
209 Vivir Bien, 183, 186, 187. See also Buen Vivir
Transition Town Initiative (tti), 138, 140, von Foerster, Heinz, 88, 200, 241n7
144–45, 154, 197–98, 236n26 von Werlhof, Claudia, 10–11; Berry and, 12;
Trinh Minh-ha, 37–38 career of, 231n6; on modernity, 14; on
“self-alchemization,” 91; on Zapatistas, 14
Ulloa, Astrid, 74–75, 102, 176, 257n13
Ulm school of design, 32–33 Wasserman, Arnold, 156
Uma Kiwe (Mother Earth), 199 Watson, Tim, 234n16
umbilical cord, burial of, 72, 213, 240n24, West, Paige, 64
256n10 White, Damian, 47, 62, 250n16
United Nations, 6–7 Whitehead, Alfred North, 102, 144
universal design, 45 WikiLeaks, 108–9
urban design, 40–41, 121, 246n10 Willis, Anne-Marie, 110–11; on ontological
uroboros, 252n2 design, 105; on transition design, 49, 50,
223
Valdés, Bebo, 247n20 Winograd, Terry, 105, 110; on ontological de-
van der Hammen, María Clara, 257n13 sign, xiv, 42, 116, 241n1; on organizational
Varela, Francisco, xii, 3, 79–80, 167, 211; theory, 245n8
on autonomy, 165; on autopoiesis, xiv, Wiwa people (Colombia), 74–75, 176
5, 168–72, 183; Buddhism and, 241n1; World Bank development programs, 59,
on Cartesianism, 81; on cognition, 42, 61, 190
81, 240n1; on “ethical know-how,” 110, World Social Forum, 15–16, 67
126–27; on modernism, 97–100; on ob- World Trade Organization (wto), 69
jectivity, 252n6; on structural coupling,
169; on transition design, 157 yin-yang dualism, 94
Vasudevan, Pavithra, 58 Yunus, Muhammad, 238n10
Vattimo, Gianni, 80
Venice Architecture Biennale, 38 Zapatistas, xvi, 7, 14, 177, 180; on autonomy,
Verden-Zöller, Gerda, 83, 232n9; on 165, 172, 253n8; declarations of, 173–74;
interconnected communities, 213–14; on on globalization, 86, 174; Juntas de Buen
“matristic cultures,” 12–14 Gobierno of, 174; World Social Forum
Vernadsky, Vladimir, 248n4 and, 15–16
Vía Campesina movement, 198, 236n23 Zhang, Amy, 125, 130, 131
290 Index