Full Description
This book brings together a new generation of designers, architects and artists exploring how to reorient their practices for the flourishing of other species.
Design is deeply associated with creating a better way of life - for humans. Yet we exist alongside billions of animals, plants and other living beings. Always putting human needs first has had devastating consequences on landscapes, other species and the climate. What if we fundamentally shifted our perspective? More-than-human design begins by acknowledging our entanglement with the ecosystems that give us life. It challenges us to imagine a world in which human desires no longer take precedence over the rights and needs of living systems.
This book brings together a new generation of designers, architects and artists exploring how to reorient their practices for the flourishing of other species. With contributions by renowned writers and thinkers, including Anna Tsing, Tim Ingold and Daisy Hildyard, it examines what it means to design with and for the living world.
Contents
Foreword, Tim Marlow
Introduction, Justin McGuirk
I BEING LANDSCAPE
To feel yourself a landscape, Daisy Hildyard
Noticing is my way of opposing, Anna Tsing and Justin McGuirk
II MAKING WITH THE WORLD
The more-than-human city, James Peplow Powell
Trans-species architecture, Andrés Jaque
Living materials, Jia Yi Gu
III SHIFTING PERSPECTIVE
Inviting multispecies proposals, Michelle Westerlaken
Designing when 'spacetime is doomed', Tony Dunne and Fiona Raby
Afterword, Tim Ingold
Biographies
Index
Picture credits
Acknowledgements
Imprints