Publicação
Visuals for Emancipatory Technology: A Case Study in Co-Designing a Visual Language to Counter Online Gender-Based Violence on Indian Twitter
| Resumo: | Abstract This essay is an account of the visual design for Uli, a user-facing browser plugin to detect and moderate online gender-based violence on Twitter. The authors of this essay, who were involved as visual designers in the team that developed Uli, discuss the co-design process behind creating the visual narrative of such a tool to represent the collective labour in its creation by journalists, activists, community influencers, writers, technologists, and researchers engaged in the struggle against the interwoven caste, religion, gender and sexuality-based violence both online and offline. The essay finally sheds light on how such a visual identity and narrative can promote an alternate visual culture that challenges the dominant visual language of social media that's complacent in the propagation of online gender-based violence. |
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| Autores principais: | Mehta,Twisha |
| Outros Autores: | Chakraborty,Shagnik |
| Assunto: | visual design Twitter plugin online gender-based violence feminist technology interdisciplinary design |
| Ano: | 2023 |
| País: | Portugal |
| Tipo de documento: | artigo |
| Tipo de acesso: | acesso aberto |
| Instituição associada: | Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia |
| Idioma: | inglês |
| Origem: | SciELO Portugal |
| Resumo: | Abstract This essay is an account of the visual design for Uli, a user-facing browser plugin to detect and moderate online gender-based violence on Twitter. The authors of this essay, who were involved as visual designers in the team that developed Uli, discuss the co-design process behind creating the visual narrative of such a tool to represent the collective labour in its creation by journalists, activists, community influencers, writers, technologists, and researchers engaged in the struggle against the interwoven caste, religion, gender and sexuality-based violence both online and offline. The essay finally sheds light on how such a visual identity and narrative can promote an alternate visual culture that challenges the dominant visual language of social media that's complacent in the propagation of online gender-based violence. |
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