ABSTRACT

Imaginative design will be a crucial factor in enacting sustainability in people's daily lives. Yet current design practice is trapped in consumerist cycles of innovation and production, making it difficult to imagine how we might develop a more meaningful and sustainable rendition of material culture. Through fundamental design research, The Spirit of Design challenges a host of common assumptions about sustainability, progress, growth and globalization. Walker's practice-based explorations of localisation, human meaning and functional objects demonstrate the imaginative potential of research-through-design and yield a compelling, constructive and essentially hopeful direction for the future - one that radically re-imagines our material culture by meshing mass-production with individuality, products with place, and utilitarian benefit with environmental responsibility. In so doing, the author explores: - How understandings of human meaning affect design and how design can better incorporate issues of personal meaning - How mass production needs to become integrated with localised production and service provision - How short-lived electronic goods can be brought into a more sustainable design paradigm - The changing role of the designer in a post-consumerist world Taking a design-centred approach - a combination of creative, propositional design practice, reasoned argument and theoretical discussion - the book will impel readers to investigate the nature of contemporary material culture and its relationship to both the natural environment and to deeper notions of human meaning.

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|13 pages

Sambo's Stones

Sustainability and meaningful objects

chapter 3|10 pages

Following Will-o'-the-Wisps and Chasing Ghosts

Re-directing design through practice-based research

chapter 4|12 pages

After Taste

The power and prejudice of product appearance

chapter 5|11 pages

Extant Objects

Seeing through design

chapter 6|30 pages

Sermons in Stones

Argument and artefact for sustainability

chapter 7|14 pages

Gentle Arrangements

Artefacts of disciplined empathy

chapter 8|14 pages

The Chimera Reified

Design, meaning and the post-consumerism object

chapter 9|14 pages

The Spirit of Design

Notes from the shakuhachi flute

chapter 10|17 pages

Wrapped Attention

Designing products for evolving permanence and enduring meaning

chapter 11|19 pages

Temporal Objects

Design, change and sustainability

chapter 12|21 pages

Meaning in the Mundane

Aesthetics, technology and spiritual values

chapter 13|21 pages

Wordless Questions

The physical, the virtual and the meaningful

chapter 14|4 pages

Epilogue

The physical, the virtual and the meaningful