I first came to know Ryn Seo in 2019, when she enrolled in one of my introductory undergraduate courses in Industrial and Information Design. Even at that early stage of her academic formation, Ryn Seo exhibited an intellectual disposition that distinguished from her peers. While most undergraduate students initially engage with design through questions of form, usability, or market applicability, Ryn Seo demonstrated from the outset a markedly different orientation-one grounded in a critical awareness of the socio-political conditions through which designed objects, systems, and environments acquire meaning.
Over the course of her undergraduate education, Ryn Seo continued to enroll in several of my courses and regularly sought my mentorship regarding her long-term scholarly aspirations. Through sustained academic interaction, I observed the gradual but highly deliberate formation of her research identity by critical design studies, design anthropology, social theory, and the politics of material culture. Even as an undergraduate, Ryn Seo displayed a level of theoretical curiosity, methodological discipline, and intellectual seriousness that is rarely encountered at that stage of academic development.
Following graduation, Ryn Seo matriculated into the Master’s program at Korea University, where I assumed formal responsibility as her principal advisor and thesis supervisor. In this capacity, | oversaw every phase of her graduate training, including the conceptual formulation of research questions, the development of methodological frameworks, the execution of field research, conference presentations, and the completion of the master’s thesis.
Ryn Seo’s thesis, entitled “The Politics of Disability, Objects, and Everyday Life: Participatory Design Research with NoDeul School for the Disabled through Nonlinear Narrative Mapping,” represents an intellectually ambitious and methodologically sophisticated inquiry situated at the intersection of disability studies, design anthropology, material culture studies, and participatory design research. Throughout the duration of her graduate studies, l supervised her engagement with a broad range of scholarly domains, including design anthropology, theories of objects and materiality, disability and intersectionality, feminist epistemologies, and community-based design praxis. It is no exaggeration to say that few students at the master’s level demonstrate such breadth of theoretical engagement while simultaneously maintaining empirical and methodological rigor.
