BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Design Research Society//Silkstart Technology Inc.//
BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Diseña Special Issue #30 – Minor Gestures
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20251201T171358
UID:692dccd61995c705b116bcb1
DESCRIPTION:Call for Papers: Dise&ntilde\;a Special Issue #30 &ndash\; 
 Minor Gestures This call for proposals invites examples\, discussions\, 
 and outlines of minor gestures through a broad range of radical 
 positions―in space\, in place\, in discourse\, as much as in praxis―to
  continue shaping the world while changing the world. GUEST EDITORS: Danah
  Abdulla | University of the Arts London Pedro J. S. Vieira de Oliveira | 
 Universit&auml\;t der K&uuml\;nste Berlin Submission deadline: April 26\, 
 2026 Expected publication date: January 2027 
 https://www.revistadisena.uc.cl/index.php/Disena/announcement/view/500 
 Since the publication of the article &lsquo\;The Case for Minor 
 Gestures&rsquo\; in Dise&ntilde\;a #22 in 2023\, the expansion of crises 
 and the illusion of insurmountability have escalated significantly. 
 Design\, as a future-thinking discipline\, always appears unprepared for 
 the future. The problem with the future is that it keeps us constantly 
 thinking of times of crisis as something happening in the future rather 
 than currently happening. Therefore\, we design for what is to come rather
  than what already is. When the design arrives\, the what has already 
 destroyed what is to come\, rendering the design irrelevant. Our offering 
 to think of minor gestures as a theory-in-the-making\, in a constant state
  of incompleteness―not as a method or set of specific guidelines that 
 can be turned into metrics and numbers\, but as an arrangement of 
 practices that renders provisionality its core characteristic―becomes an
  important device to enact the possibility of a future. Minor gestures are
  localized\, subversive acts that can be performed to expand the limits of
  a given enclosed system. Minor gestures are also exercises in careful 
 exclusion\, for inclusion does not mean totality. Ultimately\, they are 
 spaces to ignite imagination: a way of enabling us to become critically 
 informed citizens through the creation of spaces in which we can sense\, 
 view\, and think about the world in order to transform it. Examples of 
 minor gestures are abundant: Ailton Krenak&rsquo\;s 
 &lsquo\;parachutes&rsquo\; (2020)\, which slow us down from the fall we 
 are experiencing\, are mechanisms for thinking and acting that allow for 
 perspective\, for strategizing\, and ultimately\, for change\; the 
 persistence of anti-genocide actions all over the world\, including those 
 from Palestinians in Gaza and the Occupied Territories―bearing witness 
 and refusing to remain silent or complicit in the face of political\, 
 institutional\, and algorithmic (therefore\, designed) obscurations of 
 violence. A minor gesture can also be an act of careful disassembly of a 
 given system\, such as Jota Momba&ccedil\;a&rsquo\;s (2021) call for an 
 &lsquo\;ontological strike&rsquo\;―a need to stop and care for that 
 which must decay and disappear\, so that we survive. Considered in this 
 way\, minor gestures are not about stark definitions but about movements 
 towards provisional assemblages. They are about what is being done and can
  be done now\, rather than speculations about major structural change 
 disconnected from urgent everyday realities. Yet minor gestures unfold 
 with the thought that it is only through collective\, slow\, subversive\, 
 and surreptitious motion and movement that major structural change can 
 happen over time. This call for proposals invites examples\, discussions\,
  and outlines of minor gestures through a broad range of radical 
 positions―in space\, in place\, in discourse\, as much as in praxis―to
  continue shaping the world while changing the world. Topics of interest 
 include (but are not limited to): -Design as a space of possibilities\, 
 where strategies for problem-finding\, rather than problem-solving\, can 
 be drawn. -Para-curricular modes of studying and action within\, without\,
  and beyond the classroom. -Minor acts of institutional disobedience 
 enacted by (but not exclusively through) design projects. -Subversive 
 modes of studying and action within classrooms\, universities\, and 
 institutions. -Experiments\, studies\, and theories-in-the-making for new 
 forms of political action and disruption. -Design propositions for workers
  organizing against the grain of algorithmic governance. -Project-
 disoriented\, rather than project-oriented\, design ideas and strategies. 
 Contributions can be theoretical\, empirical\, and/ or visual\, and should
  not shy away from sharing provocative ideas that make readers think and 
 question. We welcome contributions featuring perspectives from disciplines
  beyond design\, and/ or those that recast design in a different light. 
 References Abdulla\, D.\, &amp\; Vieira de Oliveira\, P. J. S. (2023). The
  Case for Minor Gestures. Dise&ntilde\;a\, (22)\, 6&ndash\;6. 
 https://doi.org/10.7764/disena.22.Article.6 Krenak\, A. (2020). Ideas to 
 Postpone the End of the World (A. Doyle\, Trans.). House of Anansi Press 
 Incorporated. Momba&ccedil\;a\, J. (2021). N&atilde\;o v&atilde\;o nos 
 matar agora. Cobog&oacute\;. 
LOCATION:
PRIORITY:5
URL:https://www.designresearchsociety.org:443/events/call-for-papers-
 disena-special-issue-30-minor-gestures
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
