The humanities and/in HCI

  • Authors:
  • Jeffrey Bardzell;Shaowen Bardzell;Carl DiSalvo;William Gaver;Phoebe Sengers

  • Affiliations:
  • Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA;Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA;Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;University of London, London, UK;Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA

  • Venue:
  • CHI '12 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
  • Year:
  • 2012

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Abstract

In the past two decades, as technology has moved from the workplace to nearly all aspects of our everyday lives, HCI has also increased the breadth and depth of its research agenda. The breadth increase can be seen in the increasingly broad understanding of stakeholders and long-term socio-cultural-environmental consequences of interactive technologies. The depth increase can be seen in the seriousness with which HCI takes complex, subjective dimensions of interaction, such as affect, identity, experience, aesthetics. Humanistic forms of scholarship, including theories, methodologies, and scholarly forms, have increasingly been used to address many of these breadth and depth issues. In this panel, we explore the state of the art of humanist scholarship in HCI and consider its future trajectories.