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Reimagining (Women’s) Health: HCI, Gender and Essentialised Embodiment

Published: 26 August 2020 Publication History

Abstract

An ever-increasing body of work within HCI investigates questions of around “Women’s Health” with the aim to disrupt the status quo of defaulting to an implicit norm of cis-male bodies. This laudable and feminist project has the potential to drastically improve the inclusivity and availability of health care. To explore how this research attends to gender, embodiment and identity, we conducted a critical discourse analysis of 17 publications explicitly positioning themselves as works concerned with “Women’s Health”. We find essentialised articulations of embodiment and gender, though little discussion on the intersections of race, class, sexuality and cultural contexts. Through two speculative designs, we illustrate potential responses to our analysis: The Shadow Zine, a reflection of self and the Compass, a token for community care.1 Our work provides an opportunity to develop a broader frame of gender and health, one that centers (gendered) marginalised health by attending to the power structures of existing medical practices and norms.

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cover image ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction  Volume 27, Issue 4
Special Issue on HCI and the Body:?Reimagining Women's Health and Regular Papers
August 2020
358 pages
ISSN:1073-0516
EISSN:1557-7325
DOI:10.1145/3411214
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Published: 26 August 2020
Accepted: 01 May 2020
Revised: 01 March 2020
Received: 01 June 2019
Published in TOCHI Volume 27, Issue 4

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  1. Gender
  2. critical theory
  3. embodiment
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  5. health
  6. marginalisation
  7. speculative design
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