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resilients:resilients_in_review [2013-03-19 05:34] alkanresilients:resilients_in_review [2013-09-06 09:06] (current) – old revision restored (2013/05/14 11:33) nik
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 [[Edible Alchemy]] by Carole Collet and Bartaku discusses resilience and adaptation in relation to the properties of two intriguing plants -- flax and Aronia -- and how these were used in Temporary photoElectric Digestopians (TpED), a series of co-creation worklabs, and the Edible Alchemy Aperolab. [[Resilience Thinking DIY]] was an exercise held at Central Saint Martin's College and is summarised here to encourage readers to practice resilient thinking in design. [[A Leaky Loop]] by Bartaku narrates the kind of intimate and bizarre experience you can expect as a TpED creator and tester, while [[Silients]] is a fragmentary meditation on a peculiar variation of “resilients.” [[Edible Alchemy]] by Carole Collet and Bartaku discusses resilience and adaptation in relation to the properties of two intriguing plants -- flax and Aronia -- and how these were used in Temporary photoElectric Digestopians (TpED), a series of co-creation worklabs, and the Edible Alchemy Aperolab. [[Resilience Thinking DIY]] was an exercise held at Central Saint Martin's College and is summarised here to encourage readers to practice resilient thinking in design. [[A Leaky Loop]] by Bartaku narrates the kind of intimate and bizarre experience you can expect as a TpED creator and tester, while [[Silients]] is a fragmentary meditation on a peculiar variation of “resilients.”
  
-In [[the pollinators review|The Pollinators]], nadine review the meaning and implications of reviving modes of cultural travel where the journey is the destination, as an antidote both for tourism and the utilitarian obsession with getting from A to B in the shortest time and space. In addition to the Pollinators/Peregrini trip, nadine explores other forms of "slow mobility" with the [[Buratinas]] solar-powered boat project and tapping into participants' "creative DNA" through situationist interventions in [[being boucalais 1|Being Boucalais 1(i)]]. Meanwhile, Theun Karelse compares and contrasts his experiences of biking and hiking on the Polliinators/Peregrini and Unmanned Resilience expeditions, and discusses several ideas for designing future modes of resilient travel, in [[resilient travel|Resilient Travel: From Biking to Hiking]]. +In [[the pollinators review|The Pollinators]], nadine review the meaning and implications of reviving modes of cultural travel where the journey is the destination, as an antidote both for tourism and the utilitarian obsession with getting from A to B in the shortest time and space. As journeys bring out the philosophers in all of us, one of the travellers, Carla Garlaschi used the trip to meditate on the important things in life in [[cosas_importantes|Las Cosas Importantes]]. In addition to the Pollinators/Peregrini trip, nadine explores other forms of "slow mobility" with the [[Buratinas]] solar-powered boat and tapping into participants' "creative DNA" through situationist interventions in [[being boucalais 1|Being Boucalais 1(i)]]. Meanwhile, Theun Karelse compares and contrasts his experiences of biking and hiking on the Polliinators/Peregrini and Unmanned Resilience expeditions, and discusses several ideas for designing future modes of resilient travel, in [[resilient travel|Resilient Travel: From Biking to Hiking]]. 
  
-In connection with the Unmanned Resilience case study, Uroš Veber interviewed Helena Krapež, the owner of an excursion farm on the Gora plateau in western Slovenia. [[bake your own|If you can’t pay for a loaf, go bake your own]] is a fascinating ethnographic glimpse into the state of farming in this region, and by extension, the changes and upheavals taking place in the wider society of Slovenia -- not to mention the resourcefulness of one woman in challenging circumstances. Shelbatra Jashari narrates her journey in search of personal resilience during the Unmanned Resilience field trip and about meeting the Peregrini at the end of their journey in her poetic [[surrender_travelogue|Surrender Travelogue]].+In [[Unmanned Aerial Ecologies]], Honor Harger examines artistic interventions in the informational airspace ecology of drones -- a pervasively military and government-centric frontier -- and in particular the work by Marko Peljhan, who has been active in this area since the 90s. In connection with the Unmanned Resilience case study, Uroš Veber interviewed Helena Krapež, the owner of an excursion farm on the Gora plateau in western Slovenia. [[bake your own|If you can’t pay for a loaf, go bake your own]] is a fascinating ethnographic glimpse into the state of farming in this region, and by extension, the changes and upheavals taking place in the wider society of Slovenia -- not to mention the resourcefulness of one woman in challenging circumstances. Shelbatra Jashari narrates her journey in search of personal resilience during the Unmanned Resilience field trip and about meeting the Peregrini at the end of their journey in her poetic [[surrender_travelogue|Surrender Travelogue]].
  
-Exploring methods of prototyping possible futures, Anna Maria Orru and David Relan discuss their scenario building toolkit in [[scenario symphony|Composing a Scenario Symphony]]. This approach draws on a combination of Lance Gunderson and C. S. Holling’s panarchy systems model outlined in [[From Pan To Panarchy]], and the idea of [[temporal model|The Temporal Model in Future Scenario Building]]. Maja Kuzmanovic and Nik Gaffney build and reflect on these foundations in the [[Prehearsal Pocket Guide]], a recipe for designing and enacting prehearsals, and [[Prehearsing the Future]], a sustained examination and roundup of FoAM's own ventures in future preparedness. Finally, Christina Stadlbauer and FoAM explore techniques for cultivating "inner resilience" through meditative and contemplative practice in Naikan as Resilient Practice.+Exploring methods of prototyping possible futures, Anna Maria Orru and David Relan discuss their scenario building toolkit in [[scenario symphony|Composing a Scenario Symphony]]. This approach draws on a combination of Lance Gunderson and C. S. Holling’s panarchy systems model outlined in [[From Pan To Panarchy]], and the idea of [[temporal model|The Temporal Model in Future Scenario Building]]. Maja Kuzmanovic and Nik Gaffney build and reflect on these foundations in the [[Prehearsal Pocket Guide]], a recipe for designing and enacting prehearsals, and [[Prehearsing the Future]], a sustained examination and roundup of FoAM's own ventures in future preparedness. Finally, Christina Stadlbauer and FoAM explore contemplative and meditative techniques for cultivating "inner resilience" in [[Naikan as Resilient Practice]].
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