CALL FOR CHAPTERS edited by Rowan Wilken (Melbourne) One of the striking aspects of globalisation is that it has led to a revival of interest in, and a renewed concern for, the concept of place. This renewal of interest in place - which parallels a recent 'geographical turn' in media studies -has direct implications for how we engage with mobile phones. A key reason for this reinvigoration of the idea of place, and why it is considered Yet, despite its apparent significance, and despite the fact that it enjoys wide currency and use, place nevertheless remains an elusive concept, one that is difficult to encapsulate and define with any accuracy. In addition to a lack of definitional precision, there is a wide range of approaches to conceiving of place, all of which serve to further highlight its complexity. What is more, place is increasingly recognized as important to our understandings of mobile phone use, and the notion of place is widely referenced in the mobile phone literature, yet there is little sustained critical engagement with this concept, or adequate examination of how mobile phone use might impact on our existing conceptions and experiences of place and vice versa. Such an undertaking is all the more important given the extension of mobile phones into media, with vibrant users cultures emerging associated with social networking, camera and video phones and sharing, mobile Internet, Bluetooth, and applications (iPhones, smartphones), and technologies explicitly tied to determining location and responding to place (GPS, location-based technologies). This book collection seeks to respond to these issues by establishing a close, critical dialogue between place theorists and mobiles researchers. Accordingly, we invite proposals for papers that will examine the interrelationship between place and mobile media use. Papers could address (but need not be limited to) any aspect of the following
Please send proposals of up to 500 words to both editors -- Rowan Wilken (rwilken@unimelb.edu.au) and Gerard Goggin (g.goggin@unsw.edu.au) -- by 1 November 2009. About the editors: Rowan Wilken (rwilken@unimelb.edu.au) is a lecturer in the Cinema & Cultural Studies program at the University of Melbourne. He is author of a number of essays on place and mobile media, and is presently working on a book entitled 'Teletechnologies, Place and Community'. Gerard Goggin (g.goggin@unsw.edu.au) is Professor of Digital Communication and |