Unsustaining the commodity-machine Commoning practices in postcapitalist design
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| Cosupervisors | |
| Award date | 04-05-2021 |
| Number of pages | 229 |
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| Abstract |
This thesis surveys the ways in which design practices can contribute to a postcapitalist transition. I study several contemporary product design projects that develop everyday tools, building systems, and fabrication machinery. Together, they encapsulate peer production, open-sourcing, and the maker movement.
These trends constitute a coherent methodology of commoning, which manifests itself in three ways: shared creation (designing in common), shared governance (managing designs in common), and shared access (holding the means of production in common). I describe how this shared valorisation of labour, knowledge, and artefacts radically alters the political economy of design practices. How to disentangle design from capital? To what extent might commoning practices disrupt the Commodity-Machine? How do we prefigure a resilient and regenerative economy? Is there a postcapitalist blueprint for the rapid and just eco-social transition ahead? In four chapters and a concluding discussion, this study responds to these pressing questions. |
| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
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