Caron, A. H., & Caronia, L. (2007). Moving cultures: Mobile communication in everyday life. McGill-Queen's University Press.
Acknowledgements
  Introduction
  New social scenarios
  Speaking objects, acting words: New communication practices
  Life stories of technologies in everyday life
  Now playing: Mobiles, discourses, and advertising
  Language, interaction and mobile culture: Field Research among teenagers
  Displaying identities in urban space: How do young people talk on mobile phones?
  Mobile culture in everyday life: Teenagers talking on their mobiles
  SMS in everyday life: Ethnography of a secret language
  Intergenerational communication: Changes, constants, and new models
  Mobile communication as social performance: New ethics, new politeness, new aesthetics
Notes
Bibliography
Index
 

Book Description
The interruption of personal interaction, even the most intimate, by a ringing cell phone has profoundly affected social behaviour. New communication technologies transform culture - but the reverse is also true. Moving Cultures explores the ways in which teenagers have creatively adopted cell phones and blackberries in their social and cultural lives. André Caron and Letizia Caronia look at teenagers' use of text messaging to chat, flirt, and gossip. They find that messaging among teens has little to do with sending shorthand information quickly. Instead, it is a verbal performance through which young people create culture. Moving Cultures argues that teenagers have domesticated and reinterpreted this technology. The authors use these findings as a framework for exploring the larger impact of emerging communication technologies on daily life. They focus on the social and cultural dimensions of the contemporary "mobile turn" - the ways in which new technologies have freed us from temporal and spatial constraints: even the simplest notions of being present or absent, being alone or with someone, must be redefined. Moving Cultures also explores the emergence of an "on generation" and the death of silence, remote parenting, the performance of identity in urban space, the creation of new languages, and technologically mediated cultural communities.

About the Author
André H. Caron is a professor of communications and the Bell Chair and director of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Emerging Technologies (CITÉ) at Université de Montréal. Letizia Caronia is the author of numerous books, including Media and Everyday Life, and associate professor, education, University of Bologna.

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