Unfolding and Refolding Embodiment into the Landscape of Ubiquitous Computing

Lea Schick, Lone Malmborg

    Research output: Other contributionNet publication - Internet publicationResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    This paper advocates the future of the body as a distributed and shared embodiment; an unfolded body that doesn’t end at one's skin, but emerges as intercorporeality between bodies and the technological environment. Looking at new tendencies within interaction design and ubiquitous computing to see how these are to an increasing extent focusing on sociality, context-awareness, relations, affects, connectedness, and collectivity we will examine how these new technological movements can change our perception of embodiment towards a distributed and shared one. By examining interactive textiles as part of a future rising landscape of multi-sensory networks we will exemplify how the new technologies can shutter dichotomies and challenge traditional notions of embodiment and the subject. Finally, we show how this ‘new embodiment’ manifests Deleuze’s philosophy of the body as something unstable and changing, and how his refolding of the body can be useful for future interaction designers to understand the context they work in and the challenges they will meet.
    Original languageEnglish
    Publication date12 Dec 2009
    Publication statusPublished - 12 Dec 2009

    Keywords

    • Distributed embodiment
    • Intercorporeality
    • Ubiquitous computing
    • Interactive textiles
    • Deleuzian body

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