Abstract
Human–computer interaction (HCI) has traditionally framed itself as a design-oriented discipline. This position, in turn, frames design as HCI’s primary tool for intervening or producing change in the world. By taking up two apparently contradictory suggestions—that there is less design in the world than there might seem, and that there is more of it around than ever before—this article examines the limits and rhetorics of design in HCI and in the broader cultural settings within which HCI is embedded.
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Paul Dourish
Paul Dourish ([email protected], http://www.dourish.com) is an interdisciplinary scholar with an interest in social studies of science and technology; he is Chancellor’s Professor of Informatics at UC Irvine, 5086 Donald Bren Hall, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-3440, USA.