Cosmologies of Worldbuilding
ποΈ Wednesday, 24 June β 10:10am
- 10:50am
(40 mins)
Presenters
Image
Abstract
Researchers from the Lab of Speculative Repair propose a workshop exploring worldbuilding through divination and non-Western cosmologies. The lab is interested in worldbuilding as a pedagogical mechanism in games and how these understandings transfer into the real world. Facilitators will examine how divination technologies from African and Indigenous belief systems to tarot function as pedagogical tools that conjure a worldbuilding praxis centered on consent and speculative methods of repair. The workshop will support the development of an interactive oracle AI project and interrogate worldbuilding as a tool of repair in the design of interactive narrative XR applications. The workshop accommodates 10 to 12 self-selected participants over two hours. The lab will supply tarot decks; participants should bring large pads and writing materials. The workshop unfolds across three learning outcomes. The first explores the history of tarot, focusing on the Rider-Waite-Smith deck and its illustrator, Pamela Colman Smith, a woman of color erased from her own work until the 2009 centennial, when U.S. Games finally renamed the deck in her honor. Participants will reflect on the contributions of women of color to worldbuilding and their systematic erasure.The second outcome examines overlaps between African, African American, and Indigenous cosmologies and contemporary divination practices as forms of social worldbuilding, exploring how these traditions evolved alongside tarot through queer, Black, Indigenous, and ecologically inspired decks.
The third outcome uses collective worldbuilding through active tarot reading to track what has and hasn't worked in prior worldbuilding frameworks, reconsidering speculation and the consent embedded in divination as a foundation for reimagining terraforming. The structural framework is the Kongo cosmogram, a cartographic chart from the Bakongo tradition mapping the relationality between the spirit world and the physical.
The third outcome uses collective worldbuilding through active tarot reading to track what has and hasn't worked in prior worldbuilding frameworks, reconsidering speculation and the consent embedded in divination as a foundation for reimagining terraforming. The structural framework is the Kongo cosmogram, a cartographic chart from the Bakongo tradition mapping the relationality between the spirit world and the physical.
Biography
Clareese Hill is a practice-based researcher exploring the validity of the word "identity" from her perspective as an Afro-Caribbean American woman through collaborating with emerging technology and meditative praxis. Clareese's practice materializes in performance, exhibition, and writing. She has disseminated her research internationally at Aalto University in Finland, GΓΆteborgs Universitet Akademin Valand, The Royal College of Art, London, Goldsmiths University of London, University of Sussex, CUNY Graduate Center, The Chicago Art Department, Smack Mellon in Brooklyn, and Emerson Contemporary, Boston. She was also a 2020 Rapid Response for a Better Digital Future fellow (Phase One).