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Invisible man: Literature and the body in design practice

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 17:49 authored by Tarryn HandcockTarryn Handcock
As a culturally produced text, literature is seen as a lens with the potential to draw attention to the values, ideas, and beliefs that underlie a society. In this paper three key themes in H.G. Wells' novel The Invisible Man (1897), are discussed: firstly, the ways that the body may be fashioned through dress and individual practices; secondly, how wearable artefacts may socialize bodies and symbolically communicate; and thirdly, how the fashioned body may challenge personal and cultural boundaries. Collectively, these issues draw attention to the relational network of body, culture, and dress. These relationships are highly relevant to design research in fashion, dress, and wearable artefacts, which all use the body as a site. This study is seen as being an example of how literature may be utilized as a speculative device to encourage experimental and creative design research practices. My doctoral research, which emphasizes the body and skin as sites for design, is used as an example of a cross-disciplinary approach that draws on the issues raised through an analysis of the novel.

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    ISBN - Is published in 9788778303165 (urn:isbn:9788778303165)
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Start page

274

End page

282

Total pages

9

Outlet

Proceedings of Nordic Design Research Conference 2013

Editors

E. Brandt, P. Ehn, T. D. Johansson, M. H. Reimer, T. Markussen and A. Vallgårda

Name of conference

Nordes 2013

Publisher

The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Schools Architecture, Design and Conservation

Place published

Denmark

Start date

2013-06-09

End date

2013-06-12

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006048508

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-09-18

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