Stories and Worldviews is the third and final book in this series. It brings together conversations, reflections, and design responses that explore how stories shape our understanding of public breastfeeding β and how we might tell them differently.
This book sits with complexity. It doesnβt try to simplify or wrap things up neatly. Instead, it explores how stories are carried, shared, and held in bodies, spaces, and language. It draws from the voices of eight informants, walks through public space, and the messiness of doing design research in real time, through a pandemic.
As with the other books, it begins with a set of principles β not rules, but anchors β for designing and for designing design research. What ties these books together is a commitment to diverse lived experience, critical reflection, and the idea that design can be a way to ask better questions, not just offer answers.
Listen in.
You can also listen to this book as an audio version, read by me. Itβs included to offer another way in β whether you take it in while walking, resting, or doing something else.
Sometimes hearing something changes how it lands.