Matt Ward’s food for thought: The interplay between fiction and design

Matt Ward offers some interesting food for thought in ‘Design Fiction as Pedagogic Practice’. The title sounded scary BUT it was definitely worth the read.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sounds silly but I’ve never really considered the concept/word “design” when I think about writing. And design is essentially what you do as a fictional writer. You design characters, worlds, the plot…everything inside your story.

Ward is fascinated with this ‘interplay between fiction and design and speculation’.

He notes that “all design is fiction”  because designers create ‘propositions for a world that is yet to exist’. It’s actually incredibly interesting to think about this process. I’ve always loved to write so the notion of encouraging imagination to turn fictions into reality is really inspiring.

 

I’m imagining these uber-cool designers living in this amazing fantasy world where they dream up new worlds and gadgets to use in them. What a cool job!

 

 

Finally Ward makes an obvious but important point that “things that work don’t create interesting stories”. This is all too true in fiction! Who wants to read about a perfect world where everyone is happy and nothing interesting or exciting happens?!

He goes onto suggest that the current popularity of dystopian novels stems from this concept. It could prove worthwhile to take inspiration from The Hunger Games, Divergent and The 5th Wave (just to name a few) to get ideas for design…

Images sourced from BlazeDigital   and Blogspot 

Design Fiction and Bruce Sterling

Design fiction. Edgy, new-age, ‘geeky’, cool…

Something I’ve never heard of before starting this course. And I sure like the sound of it.

Bruce Sterling explains design fiction to be “thinking about potential objects and services and trying to get people to concentrate on those rather than entire worlds or political trends…”

It kind of sounds like being an inventor. Tracy McBean anyone?!

It encourages people to be creative and think outside the square.

Sterling explains “it’s not a kind of fiction but a kind of design. It tells worlds rather than stories”.

In saying that, I think you can find elements of design fiction within stories. Most obviously sci-fi stories. The iconic ‘Back to the Future’ series springs to mind (LOVE that show btw). Hoverboards and time-travel cars could be considered as part of design fiction right?

 

I’d sure like to see the option of REAL life time travel cars become reality…

Images from ABC.Net and DavidDarling