Message posted on 19/02/2021

CfP: 4S 2021 - Re-thinking And Experimenting With Participatory Research Practices And Design Through The Speculative And Ontological Turn

Dear all and apologies for cross-posting.

Peter Danholt and I would like to invite submissions for our open panel 'Re-thinking And Experimenting With Participatory Research Practices And Design Through The Speculative And Ontological Turn’ as part of the 4S Annual Meeting (2021). The conference, entitled "Good Relations: Practices and Methods in Unequal and Uncertain Worlds," will take place in Toronto and worldwide October 6th-9th, 2021.

We welcome submissions from across related disciplines including doctoral, post-doctoral students as well as more established scholars. Submissions will be open until March 8, 2021.

For more details on how to submit, please visit: https://www.4sonline.org/meeting/call-for-submissions/

For enquiries about the panel please contact Peter and/or myself.

Below is a description of the panel.


  1. Re-thinking And Experimenting With Participatory Research Practices And Design Through The Speculative And Ontological Turn Peter Danholt, Aarhus University; Alex Wilkie, Goldsmiths, University of London

Keywords: Ontological turn, Speculation, Multinaturalism, Design, Participatory research

What can design practices, engagement and participation become if we assume multiple ontologies, radical difference and pluralism? What happens, for instance, if established conceptions and rationalities of design and participatory research practices are exposed to a multinaturalist Amerindian ontology that implies that those with whom we study and engage see the world in the same way as we do only from different bodies? (de Castro, 1998; 2004) So, instead of inhabiting the same world, but having multiple cultures, we inhabit different worlds, but have the same culture. So, for instance in such an ontology what the designer, may see as a technological tool to aid the practice, may for the practice not be a tool, but a work load. Multinaturalism implies that we cannot take for granted a shared world and this entail that we must work harder practically and conceptually to come to inhabit the ontology of the other – and potentially invent and construct common worlds.

In accordance with the speculative and ontological turn(s), this session invites papers that speculate and experiment with such ideas and consider the consequences for design and participatory research practices (Heywood, n.d.; Jensen, 2010; Martin & Heil, 1999; Mol, 2002; Pickering, 2017; Wilkie et al., 2017). The overall ambition with such speculations and experiments is to explore and enable thinking, researching and acting differently: the care for the possible this entails and the commitment to taking seriously the production of existence and knowledges that might take place as part of participatory research practices.

The ontological and speculative turn entails the appreciation of worlds as constructed through interwoven material and conceptual practices and implies the dissolution of both nature/culture and cognitive/material oppositions. The work of Marilyn Strathern, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Bruno Latour, Annemarie Mol and Isabelle Stengers is central to the ontological turn and has proposed concepts such as dividualism, praxiography and multinaturalism (ibid). According to de Castro the ontological turn defamiliarizes and de-colonialises modernist and western ontological presumptions about nature-culture, human-non-human divisions. And as both de Castro and Jon Bialecki argue the ontological turn should not be taken – as some might read it – as a critique of one failed ontology (the western) and its replacement with another (say an ontology of sociomaterial interwovenness), since this would just be yet another modernist move. The point is, rather, and in line in with Deleuze and Guattari’s (1987: 28) empirical transcendentalism, to “overthrow ontology” altogether.

References de Castro, E. (1998). Cosmological Deixis and Amerindian Perspectivism. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4(3), 469–488. De Castro, E. V. (2004). EXCHANGING PERSPECTIVES The Transformation of Objects into Subjects in Amerindian Ontologies. Common Knowledge, 10(3), 463–484. Deleuze, G., & Guattari, F. (1987). A thousand plateaus: Capitalism and schizophrenia. Univ of Minnesota Pr. Heywood, P. (n.d.). Ontological Turn, The. . . ISSN, 12. Jensen, C. B. (2010). Ontologies for Developing Things: Making Health Care Futures Through Technology. Sense Publishers. Martin, C. B., & Heil, J. (1999). The ontological turn. Midwest Studies in Philosophy, 23(1), 34–60. Mol, A. (2002). The body multiple: Ontology in medical practice. Duke University Press. Pickering, A. (2017). The Ontological Turn: Taking Different Worlds Seriously. Social Analysis, 61(2). https://doi.org/10.3167/sa.2017.610209 Wilkie, A., Savransky, M., & Rosengarten, M. (Eds.). (2017). Speculative research: The lure of possible futures. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.


Warm regards,

Peter & Alex

Dr Alex Wilkie Reader in Design & Social Science Convenor of the MPhil/PhD Programme in Design

Out now in paperback: Speculative research: The lure of possible futures

Department of Design Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross, London SE14 6NW, UK


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