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