Shot through a feminist lens, J. L. Bowie’s discussion of user challenges the conventional notion of the “universal user” in usability studies. Informed by postmodern feminism, Bowie emphasizes on the differences among users, and complicates the theory, methods, and practice of universalization in technology design and development process. She offers an extensive literature review in user-centered design (UCD) and usability studies that concern the understanding of the user, the propose a "the universe of users" approach to user-centered design. and uses a study on the gender differences in Web navigation to demonstrate how contextualized consideration of user differences can benefit technology design and advocate for equality among users.
The challenge to the notion of "universal user" in this book chapter echoes many others such as Krug and Cooper, but unlike these two who holds an engineering perspective and aims to design usable technology that meet most users' needs in spite of their differences, Bowie, from a rhetorical perspective, embraces the differences and concerns herself with designing for not only the majority of users, but particularly for minorities or the unprivileged such as women or people with disability. This difference echoes the differences between rhetoric studies and HCI that Skeen has observed in his chapter in Rhetorically Rethinking Usability.
The challenge to the notion of "universal user" in this book chapter echoes many others such as Krug and Cooper, but unlike these two who holds an engineering perspective and aims to design usable technology that meet most users' needs in spite of their differences, Bowie, from a rhetorical perspective, embraces the differences and concerns herself with designing for not only the majority of users, but particularly for minorities or the unprivileged such as women or people with disability. This difference echoes the differences between rhetoric studies and HCI that Skeen has observed in his chapter in Rhetorically Rethinking Usability.
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