Hertzian Tales: Electronic Products, Aesthetic Experience, and Critical Design
Anthony Dunne
The MIT Press, 2005
From the book jacket:
"As our everyday social and cultural
experiences are increasingly mediated by electronic products?from
"intelligent" toasters to iPods?it is the design of these products that
shapes our experience of the "electrosphere" in which we live.
Designers of electronic products, writes Anthony Dunne in Hertzian
Tales, must begin to think more broadly about the aesthetic role of
electronic products in everyday life. Industrial design has the
potential to enrich our daily lives?to improve the quality of our
relationship to the artificial environment of technology, and even,
argues Dunne, to be subverted for socially beneficial ends.
The
cultural speculations and conceptual design proposals in Hertzian Tales
are not utopian visions or blueprints; instead, they embody a critique
of present-day practices, "mixing criticism with optimism." Six essays
explore design approaches for developing the aesthetic potential of
electronic products outside a commercial context?considering such
topics as the post-optimal object and the aesthetics of
user-unfriendliness?and five proposals offer commentary in the form of
objects, videos, and images. These include "Electroclimates,"
animations on an LCD screen that register changes in radio frequency;
"When Objects Dream...," consumer products that "dream" in
electromagnetic waves; "Thief of Affection," which steals radio signals
from cardiac pacemakers; "Tuneable Cities," which uses the car as it
drives through overlapping radio environments as an interface of
hertzian and physical space; and the "Faraday Chair: Negative Radio,"
enclosed in a transparent but radio-opaque shield.
Very little
has changed in the world of design since Hertzian Tales was first
published by the Royal College of Art in 1999, writes Dunne in his
preface to this MIT Press edition: "Design is not engaging with the
social, cultural, and ethical implications of the technologies it makes
so sexy and consumable." His project and proposals challenge it to do
so."
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