Dear List -
I was saddened to learn about Ranulph's death.We always will remember his performance at EAD Bremen conference. Design Research community and the family have my warmest thoughts With love and sympathy,
Maria Cecilia
----------------
Dr. Maria Cecilia Loschiavo dos Santos
Full Professor
University of São Paulo - Brazil
www.closchiavo.pro.br
----- Mensagem original -----
> De: "Paul Rodgers" <[log in to unmask]>
> Para: [log in to unmask]
> Enviadas: Segunda-feira, 22 de Dezembro de 2014 14:47:56
> Assunto: Re: Ranulph Glanville is Gone
> Dear List,
> It was with great sadness that I heard about Ranulph's death. My
> thoughts and condolences go out to his family and close friends.
> Ranulph was a very generous, thoughtful and quite brilliant scholar.
> Salu mentions the recently published "The Routledge Companion to
> Design Research" book that my colleague, Dr Joyce Yee, and I edited.
> We had the absolute privilege and joy of working with Ranulph on his
> contribution entitled "The Sometimes Uncomfortable Marriages of
> Design and Research" that took pride of place as the first paper in
> the book. I know Ranulph, at times, was struggling to pull this
> paper together. However, in the end he produced another
> thought-provoking piece of work.
> The paper begins with a "Personal Introduction" and I include it
> below:
> "There are many possible arguments the author of a chapter on design
> research might make, other than the one I chose to make here. And I
> have no doubt that what I have written will not sit comfortably or
> properly, in the minds of some readers. I can imagine the instantly
> dismissive tone of a certain type of response, precisely the sort of
> response I am trying to argue against. None of this makes my account
> wrong: it merely makes it contentious. It may be seen as contentious
> in what it includes, but also, and perhaps more so, in what and who
> it does not mention. The difficulty in any attempt to provide a
> position – or a review – is to find a line and then to hang a
> convincing and interesting story on it. In finding that line, any
> author will accommodate many views, but inevitably not all, and will
> feature the work of some, but not most, authorities. A further
> difficulty is not to drown the narrative of the story in reference,
> while yet showing the story is justifiable. And it is also to make
> space to include your own view, as author, without overplaying it.
> The real test of a text like this is, I believe, whether the
> argument helps you (the reader, but the author also) better to
> understand, and to act better. This is a reader’s judgement: like a
> placebo, the question is not what design research ‘really’ is, but
> how this account helps readers themselves understand and go
> forward."
> Ranulph Glanville will be very sorely missed.
> Best,
> Paul
> Paul Rodgers
> Professor of Design Issues
> Co-Director of Northumbria - Sunderland AHRC Centre for Doctoral
> Training
> Northumbria University, Faculty of Arts, Design and Social Sciences
> City Campus East, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 8ST
> e: [log in to unmask]
> w: http://www.northumbria.ac.uk/sd/academic/scd/research/
> w: http://designdisruptiongroup.wordpress.com/
> w: https://northumbria.academia.edu/PaulRodgers
> Recent Books:
> Research Methods for Product Design
> Product Design
> New Book:
> The Routledge Companion to Design Research
> ________________________________________
> From: PhD-Design - This list is for discussion of PhD studies and
> related research in Design [[log in to unmask]] on behalf of
> Ylirisku Salu [[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: 22 December 2014 04:12
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Ranulph Glanville is Gone
> Dear all,
> A good way to remember Glanville is to read some of his texts. I’ve
> only recently come at the works by Glanville due to purchasing this
> brand new book:
> The Routledge Companion to Design Research (eds.) Edited by Paul
> Rodgers, Joyce Yee
> http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415706070/
> Glanville has authored the first chapter, and I found his thoughts
> very interesting and thought-provoking. So, I began searching for
> more. Some of his works can be found at
> https://independent.academia.edu/RanulphGlanville
> I’d be interested in finding this one: Glanville, R. (1980), “Why
> design research?”, in Jacques, R. and Powell, J. (Eds), 1981
> Design/Method/Science, Westbury House, Guildford.
> In case you have this, I’d be glad if you could share a pdf. Thanks!
> Kind regards,
> Dr. Salu Ylirisku
> Leader of the Embodied Design Group
> Aalto University
> http://designresearch.aalto.fi/groups/edg/
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