Kenniscentrum faculteit Digitale Media & Creatieve Industrie

The Critical Makers Reader

(Un)learning Technology

Bloemlezing (anthologie)

A decade ago many gushed at the possibilities of 3D printers and other DIY tech. Today makers are increasingly shaking off their initial blind enthusiasm to numerically control everything, rediscovering an interest in sociocultural histories and futures and waking up to the environmental and economic implications of digital machines that transform materials. An accumulation of critique has collectively registered that no tool, service, or software is good, bad, or neutral—or even free for that matter. We’ve arrived at a crossroads, where a reflective pause coincides with new critical initiatives emerging across disciplines.<br/><br/>What was making? What is making? What could making become? And what about unmaking? The Critical Makers Reader features an array of practitioners and scholars who address these questions. Together, they tackle issues of technological making and its intersections with (un)learning, art and design, institutionalization, social critique, community organizing, collaboration, activism, urban regeneration, social inequality, and the environmental crisis.<br/><br/>

Reference Bogers, L., & Chiappini, L. (Eds.) (2019). The Critical Makers Reader: (Un)learning Technology. (INC Reader; No. 12). Institute of Network Cultures. https://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/the-critical-makers-reader-unlearning-technology/
1 January 2019

Publication date

Jan 2019

Author(s)

Loes Bogers
Letizia Chiappini

Publications:

Research database