1. Contested sites of health risks
- Author
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Kristen R. Moore, Bailey S. Cundiff, Leah Heilig, and Natasha N. Jones
- Subjects
Oppression ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Internet privacy ,050801 communication & media studies ,02 engineering and technology ,General Medicine ,Dehumanization ,Injustice ,0508 media and communications ,Transformative learning ,Police brutality ,020204 information systems ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Rhetorical question ,Narrative ,Sociology ,business ,Wearable technology ,media_common - Abstract
Employing Royster and Kirsch's (2012) concept of critical imagination, the authors imagine strategies communication designers might use to intervene in and disrupt racial injustice and oppression. Using activity trackers as technologies that communicate data about health and death, the authors retell and re-envision the case of Eric Garner, a victim of police brutality, and argue that data from activity trackers can potentially be used to reframe narratives about public health and policing. Further, through an examination of the rhetorical frames of dehumanization, disbelief, and dissociation, the authors assert that activity trackers, as communicative agents, may become transformative wearable devices that are developed and deployed with socially just communication design in mind.
- Published
- 2018
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