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Systems Thinking Resisting popular culture’s hunger for simple solutions
Kelly Easterling, via Banff Centre for the Arts "Medium Design, Easterling’s new book, can be read as a corollary to her prior work. Extrastatecraft, for instance, provides detailed descriptions of various sprawling, techno-solutionist systems that prop up capitalism and their negative impacts — but readers didn’t find explicit guidance concerning what to do about them. To be fair, a lot of books about capitalism do this; there’s plenty of cultural currency in being the most right about how bad things are. And factoring in the interconnected crises of climate change, political demagoguery, algorithm-enabled far-right radicalization, ever-widening income inequality, ever-growing refugee populations, and, of course, living through a pandemic, things are pretty bad, and solutions are badly needed. "Easterling doesn’t provide simple solutions. Medium Design actively works against popular culture’s hunger for simple solutions. While embracing a diversity of tactics for a diversity of crises, Easterling puts forward an expansive definition of 'design' that includes examples of systemic hacks like community land trusts and tactical refusals of market norms like social capital credits. The 'medium' in question is more a reference to being in the midst of things and making unusual connections rather than something between XS and XL design." - Ingrid Burrington Author Interview: How to Design Better Systems in a World Overwhelmed by Complexity |