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Stories in a beespoon: exploring future folklore through design

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Publication date27/06/2016
Host publicationProceedings of Design Research Society Conference 2016
EditorsPeter Lloyd, Erik Bohemia
PublisherDesign Research Society
Pages3485-3502
Number of pages18
Volume9
<mark>Original language</mark>English
EventDRS 2016 : Future Focused Thinking - Brighton, United Kingdom
Duration: 27/06/201630/06/2016

Conference

ConferenceDRS 2016 : Future Focused Thinking
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityBrighton
Period27/06/1630/06/16

Publication series

NameProceedings of DRS 2016
Volume9
ISSN (Print)2398-3132

Conference

ConferenceDRS 2016 : Future Focused Thinking
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityBrighton
Period27/06/1630/06/16

Abstract

This paper explores the role and potential for design as process, artefact and experience to help frame and address societal problems. We consider this through examining a future folklore dialogical object, designed to stimulate conversation and question assumptions. Beekeeping is a particularly rich context with which to adopt this methodological approach, given the significance of global threats to insect pollination aligned with beekeeping’s extensive cultural heritage.

By drawing on past narratives and contemporary knowledge and practices, the Beespoon, a small copper spoon representing the amount of honey a single bee can make, was codesigned as an experience that actively engaged people with concepts
of work, value and pollination. Our design process oscillated across past, present and future stories – the Beespoon as future folklore artefact and experience reflects this complexity, operating across time and value systems to provide new
ways to think about how we perceive and understand bees.