Non-user-friendly

Staging resistance with interpassive user experience design

Authors

  • Tomasz Hollanek University of Cambridge

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/aprja.v8i1.115424

Abstract

User-friendly design makes our use of emerging technologies intuitive and seamless, but it also conceals the new solutions’ influence over how we act, think and plan. In this paper, I analyze the logic of our newly developed ‘touchscreen sensibilities’ to speculate on alternative, ‘non-user-friendly’ design practices that, by invading intuitive interfaces, could make the users aware of their reliance on invisible algorithmic operations to learn and to feel. I revisit Žižek and Pfaller’s conception of ‘interpassivity’ to explore its potential as a means of resisting interactivity and inciting consciousness in contemporary speculative design. The critical interface I envision must defamiliarize consumption, prevent participation, and de-frame perception — make the user experience what lack of control feels like, and do so to encourage resistance.

Author Biography

Tomasz Hollanek, University of Cambridge

Tomasz Hollanek is PhD candidate at the Centre for Film & Screen, University of Cambridge

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Published

2019-08-15