TY - GEN
T1 - What We Took From Metaphors: A Case of Designing For Care After Abortion
AU - Lusi, Benedetta
AU - Vallgårda, Anna
AU - Bewley, Harvey
AU - Mouritzen, Halfdan
AU - Ludden, Geke D. S.
PY - 2024/10/13
Y1 - 2024/10/13
N2 - This paper explores designing for mental wellbeing within the space of abortion care. We collaborated with abortion care experts, as well as design and HCI researchers, to explore different approaches to this sensitive topic. This collaboration, intertwined with our own sensitivities, and published abortion stories, informed the metaphor-driven design process detailed in this paper. Reflecting on the adoption of metaphors and their deliberate release, we propose a novel and nuanced perspective on metaphors’ role in design. The process facilitated explorations into dimensions of care, poetry, materiality, and language, resulting in the design of a care package to support self-care after abortion. By leveraging the poetic level of these metaphors, we aim to engage people's experiences through tangible and ephemeral artifacts. Finally, we discuss how this approach aided in addressing the controversial, delicate, and intimate design space of abortion while acknowledging its limitations and proposing potential future applications.
AB - This paper explores designing for mental wellbeing within the space of abortion care. We collaborated with abortion care experts, as well as design and HCI researchers, to explore different approaches to this sensitive topic. This collaboration, intertwined with our own sensitivities, and published abortion stories, informed the metaphor-driven design process detailed in this paper. Reflecting on the adoption of metaphors and their deliberate release, we propose a novel and nuanced perspective on metaphors’ role in design. The process facilitated explorations into dimensions of care, poetry, materiality, and language, resulting in the design of a care package to support self-care after abortion. By leveraging the poetic level of these metaphors, we aim to engage people's experiences through tangible and ephemeral artifacts. Finally, we discuss how this approach aided in addressing the controversial, delicate, and intimate design space of abortion while acknowledging its limitations and proposing potential future applications.
KW - abortion
KW - care
KW - research through design
KW - metaphors
KW - Care Technologies
U2 - 10.1145/3679318.3685347
DO - 10.1145/3679318.3685347
M3 - Conference article
SP - 1
EP - 15
JO - NordiCHI '24: Proceedings of the 13th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction
JF - NordiCHI '24: Proceedings of the 13th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction
M1 - 14
ER -