The article proposes an empirical and discursive understanding of design as engaging and intensifying uneven power relations. By affiliating with the ontological turn in anthropology, such re-defined reading of design acknowledges design's complicity with extractive capitalism while aiming to open up possibilities to think design otherwise. In recent years, inspired by the resurgence of materialism, abstract notions of design as mediating practice between human and environment have gained popularity. Yet, these more-than-human-centred design theories tend to obscure the material and immaterial infrastructures that still shape human and nonhuman realities. By utilising the example of sand's transformation into land and tracing its journey across sites, actors and continents, the infrastructures of planetary transformation – as well as what eludes them – are investigated. Turning matter into medium emphasises thresholds and ruptures in the human-material relationship and thus transcends both a socially constructed and material reading of reality. Through a historical and empirical relocation of the current more-than-human-centred design discourse, the research presented in this article aims to support the establishment of a critical anthropology of design.
About this Journal
Somatechnics presents a thoroughly multi-disciplinary scholarship on the body, providing a space for research that critically engages with the ethico-political implications of a wide range of practices and techniques. The term ‘somatechnics’ indicates an approach to corporeality which considers it as always already bound up with a variety of technologies, techniques and technics, thus enabling an examination of the lived experiences engendered within a given context, and the effects that technologies, technés and techniques have on embodiment, subjectivity and sociality.
Anonymously double-peer-reviewed, Somatechnics seeks contributions that present innovative examinations of the interplay between bodily being and the technological context in which it occurs. The journal publishes articles and special issues on topics such as the (soma)technics of racialization, ‘terror’, movement, spatialization, size(ing), reproduction, consumption, gender, medicine, information, gaming, film, nation, globalization, ecology, bioscience, law, sexuality, family, education, health, visuality and ancestry.
Editors and Editorial Board
Editors
Dr Holly Randell-Moon, Senior Lecturer in Indigenous Australian Studies, Charles Sturt University, Australia
Professor Iris van der Tuin, Professor of Theory of Cultural Inquiry, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Reviews Editor
Tristan Kennedy, Macquarie University, Australia
Editorial Assistant
Melisse Vroegindeweij, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Editorial / Advisory Board Members
Professor Bernard Andrieu, Nancy Université, France
Assistant Professor Mahdis Azarmandi, DePauw University, USA
Professor Ian Buchanan, University of Wollongong, Australia
Professor Bronwyn Carlson, Macquarie University, Australia
Dr Sheila L. Cavanagh, York University, Canada
Associate Professor Amy Chan, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, China
Professor Lawrence Cohen, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Dr Ulrika Dahl, Uppsala University, Sweden
Associate Professor Vijay Devadas, Auckland University of Technology, Aotearoa New Zealand
Professor Lisa Downing, University of Birmingham, UK
Professor Denise Ferreira de Silva, University of British Columbia, Canada
Dr Chantelle Gray van Heerden, University of South Africa, South Africa
Dr Malena Gustavson, Linköping University, Sweden
Professor Brendan Hokowhitu, University of Queensland, Australia
Dr. Emilio Mordini, Rome, Italy
Professor Aileen Moreton-Robinson, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Professor Sally R Munt, University of Sussex, UK
Associate Professor Goldie Osuri, University of Warwick, UK
Professor Victoria Pitts-Taylor, Wesleyan University, USA
Professor Jasbir Puar, Rutgers University, USA
Professor Joseph Pugliese, Macquarie University, Australia
Professor Margrit Shildrick, Linköping University, Sweden
Dr John Simons, Australia
Dr Susan Stryker, University of Arizona, USA
Professor Rajagopalan Radhakrishnan, University of California, Irvine, USA
Professor Sherene Razack, University of California, USA
Professor Celia Roberts, University of Lancaster, UK
Professor Marsha Rosengarten, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
Associate Professor Elizabeth Stephens, University of Queensland, Australia
Professor Jennifer Terry, University of California, Irvine, USA
Professor Michael Thomson, University of Leeds, UK
Professor Alexander Weheliye, Northwestern University, USA
Indexing
Somatechnics is abstracted and indexed in the following:
- ArticleFirst
- British Library Zetoc
- BrowZine
- CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure)
- cnpLINKer
- EBSCO A-to-Z
- EBSCO Discovery Service
- European Reference Index for the Humanities (ERIH PLUS)
- Humanities Source
- Humanities Source Ultimate
- J-Gate
- JournalTOCs
- Meta Indexing
- MLA (Modern Language Association) International Bibliography
- Norwegian Register for Scientific Journals, Series and Publishers
- Publication Forum (JuFo)
- ReadCube Discover
- Researcher
- RILM Abstracts of Music Literature
- SCImago Journal Ranking
- Scopus
- STM Source
- Summon
- TDNet
- TOC Premier
- Web of Science/Emerging Sources Citation Index
- WorldCat Discovery
Somatechnics

Sample Issue
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