Art and Media Research

Public Defence in New Media, Avner Peled

Avner Peled defend his thesis: "Intergroup Contact with Participatory Telerobotic Puppetry: Tricksters in the face of intractable conflicts" on October 9th, 2025, at 12:00 in Marsio Cinema, Undergraduate Centre, in Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Department of Art and Media.

Please see the event's webpage for further information.

Two puppets sitting in front of a desk in an office set: a Muslim female in a hijab in front of a laptop and a Jewish man with a yarmulke.

Defence announcement

Title of the thesis: Intergroup Contact with Participatory Telerobotic Puppetry: Tricksters in the face of intractable conflicts

The thesis introduces a new method of peacebuilding with technology: participatory telerobotic puppetry. When opposing social groups are in a state of an intractable conflict, a conflict that becomes deeply rooted in culture and the identity of the groups, technology can be seen as a tool for reconciliation. It enables communication over distances and lets people experience the perspective of the other in a virtual reality. However, such interventions often remain in the virtual realm and do not drive long-term collective action toward peace. 

I argue that technology should be used more creatively and in a participatory manner to address intractable conflicts and demonstrate this in the field of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I start by proposing the use of remote-controlled robots, or ‘telerobots’, as a communication tool for peacebuilding that maintains a physical connection to the land. After an extensive review of the literature in the fields of social psychology and human-robot interaction, as well as a survey in Israel and Palestine, I propose involving participants from conflicting groups in the creation of a robotic puppet theater that can be performed simultaneously in two locations. 

Puppets have the unique ability to represent two narratives simultaneously, that of a character and that of the puppeteer who is bound to the puppet in an emotional connection. They allow a safe space of expression and the experience of ‘radical empathy’: a collective ritual that encourages the action of others in support of the performer. Using robots as puppets rather than avatars enables this ritual across borders. 

As part of the thesis, I developed an open-source toolkit for the creation of a telerobotic puppet theater and applied it in a participatory workshop with Israeli Jews and Palestinians from the Tech2Peace organization. The results showed that theater production can facilitate the discussion of the conflict in a playful and educational environment and that the performance has the potential to expose new audiences to a meaningful encounter with the opposing group. The thesis also includes guidelines for future ‘boundary crossing’ workshops and an account of an ad hoc follow-up intervention that was carried out in response to the war that began on October 7, 2023.

Keywords: intergroup contact, participatory design, human–robot interaction, telerobotics, theater of the oppressed, Israeli–Palestinian conflict

Info

Thesis defender: Avner Peled
Opponent: Prof. Atte Oksanen, University of Tampere, Finland
Custos: Prof. Teemu Leinonen, Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture

Thesis available for public display 7 days prior to the defence at Aaltodoc

Contact information:

avner.peled@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Show other posts from this blog

People gathered at Club Kaiku watching a video installation
Published:

Public Defence in Contemporary Art, MFA Abdullah Qureshi

Thesis: Mythological Migrations: Imagining Queer Muslim Utopias—Artistic and Curatorial Strategies of Collaboration, Collective Resistance, and Coalition Building
Illustration of a woman with red hair and a green dress in three different stages of sketching
Published:

Public Defence in New Media, MA Kirsi Manninen

Thesis: Touching Costume Sketching: Digital costume sketching using a tablet
People walking in a queue in a forest
Published:

Public Defence in Contemporary Art, MA Mari Keski-Korsu

Thesis: Walks and steams: Artistic approaches to develop more-than-human ritualisation in polycrisis
White packaging with an unexpected blue pattern on the inside
Published:

Public Defence in Visual Communication Design, MA Markus Joutsela

Thesis: Towards Experiential Packaging – Understanding and Designing for Packaging User Experience (PUX)