Beschreibung:
This book explores the intersections between wearable objects and human health, with particular emphasis on how artists and designers are creatively responding to and rethinking these relations. Addressing a rich range of wearable artefacts, from mobility aids and prosthetics to clothing and accessories to digital health tracking devices, its themes include care and cure; wellness culture and the commoditization of health; and the complex interactions between (human) bodies and (non-human) objects. With a theoretical framework inspired by the work of materialist thinkers including Sherry Turkle, Bruno Latour and Jane Bennett, and bringing the disciplinary fields of fashion studies, art and design practice, and medical and health humanities into dialogue for the first time, this volume draws attention to the complex agencies entangled in the things we wear, and situates fashion and art in relation to broader cultural and historical contexts of health, illness and disability.
Explores wearable objects and health, with particular emphasis on how artists and designers respond to them
Introduction.- 1. Collaborating.- 1.1. Jana Melkumova-Reynolds, On Crutches, Choreography and (Crip) Care: Curative objects and palliative things in two performance pieces. -1.2. Emily Beaney, Breaking the Fall.- 1.3. Alison L Goodrum, Sitting Pretty: A dress history of the side-saddle habit, 'L'-shape design and adaptive wearables.- 1.4. Sonia Bernac, The Itches: embodiment in in the age of technological entanglement.- 2. Covering.- 2.1. Christopher M. Rudeen, Securing a Place in the Sun: Clothing, Exposure, and Health.- 2.2.- Andrew Groves, Palliative Prototypes or Therapeutic Functionality? Examining C.P. Company's Urban Protection Collection.- 2.3. Rosie Broadhead, Skin and textile interaction and the future of fashion as therapeutics.- 3. Controlling.- 3.1. Dawn Woolley, Desire Lines: Quantified-Self-Portraits produced with a fitness tracking watch.- 3.2. Alanna McKnight, "Health, Comfort, and Elegance": The Shocking Trend of Electric Corsets.- 3.3. Lucie Armstrong, Office Exercises.- 4 Communicatin.- 4.1. Garry Barker, Votives and charms: materialising health-related narratives through "sacred" objects.- 4.2 Katharina Ludwig, (Ad)Dressing Wounds.- 4.3 Anna Jamieson, Crazy Jane Hats and Maria Medallions: Consuming, Collecting and Containing Love's Madness.