Lesson 5: Words, Power, Edge

Reference: Barbara Kruger

Learning Objectives

  • Examine how language frames insight and shapes power relations.
  • Practice distilling tension without flattening meaning.
  • Learn to use form (typography, hierarchy) as part of research argument.

Headline

“If you must compress, compress the system—don’t compress the user.”


Narrative & UX Interpretation

Kruger’s bold text slaps meaning into view. She exposes how statements position the reader. In research, our words do the same: “Users want…” vs. “She said…” are not neutral choices. The deck’s grammar becomes ideology. Choose your language with precision, or it will choose for you.

Developing Critical Thinking

  • Rewrite an “insight” three ways: stakeholder voice, user voice, your voice. Compare.
  • Identify verbs that erase agency (“Users struggle” vs. “We confused them”).
  • Design a one-line poster that holds the tension, not the resolution.
  • Ask: Who gains power from this phrasing? Who loses nuance?

Anchor & Process Grounding

  • Anchor: Writing Effective UX Insights / UX Communication (NN/g).
  • Grounding Move: Create a language checklist: Avoid “users say,” cite directly, label inference vs. quote, and state who decided each wording change.


Disclaimer: Articles are developed with the support of AI tools. I review and edit all work, and share this openly so readers can see how the writing is made. Peer feedback to correct or improve content is welcome.