Mediating the Sacred: Configuring a Design Space for Religious and Spiritual Tangible Interactive Artifacts

Mediating the Sacred: Configuring a Design Space for Religious and Spiritual Tangible Interactive Artifacts

Robert B. Markum
Sara Wolf
Caroline Claisse
Michael Hoefer
Abstract
Tangible artifacts and embodied experiences are central to religious and spiritual (R/S) practices, and many HCI researchers and interaction designers highlight the importance of materiality and physicality in design. In this review paper, we bring these perspectives together and examine 44 examples of R/S tangible interactive artifacts (TIAs) from academia, art, industry, and R/S communities to understand their specifics and guide future HCI research and design. We analyze these artifacts and map out a design space for R/S TIAs by matching identified characteristics of R/S TIAs with a framework from the study of material religion. The descriptive and generative R/S TIA Design Space covers insights into bodies, things, places, practices, and backgrounds. This paper offers a novel contribution to HCI research on the value and importance of tangibility and embodiment in technology-mediated practices in R/S contexts and serves as a source for future R/S TIA creation and research.
Type
Conference paper
Publication
Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference on Tangible, Embedded, and Embodied Interaction