Edited by James E. Katz
Afterword by Manuel Castells |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| 1. |
Introduction
James E. Katz |
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| Digital Divides and Social Mobility |
| 2. |
The Mobile Makes Its Mark
Lara Srivastava |
| 3. |
Shrinking Fourth World? Mobiles, Development, and Inclusion
Jonathan Donner |
| 4. |
Mobile Traders and Mobile Phones in Ghana
Ragnhild Overå |
| 5. |
Mobile Networks: Migrant Workers in Southern China
Pui-lam Law and Yinni Peng |
| 6. |
Mobile Communication in Mexico: Policy and Popular Dimensions
Judith Mariscal and Carla Marisa Bonina |
| 7. |
Reducing Illiteracy as a Barrier to Mobile Communication
Jan Chipchase |
| 8. |
Health Services and Mobiles: A Case from Egypt
Patricia Mechael |
| 9. |
How the Urban Poor Acquire and Give Meaning to the Mobile Phone
Lourdes M. Portus |
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| Sociality and Co-presence |
| 10. |
Always-On/Always-On-You: The Tethered Self
Sherry Turkle |
| 11. |
The Mobile Phone's Ring
Christian Licoppe |
| 12. |
Mobile Technology and the Body: Apparatgeist, Fashion, and Function
Scott Campbell |
| 13. |
The Mediation of Ritual Interaction via the Mobile Telephone
Rich Ling |
| 14. |
Adjusting the Volume: Technology and Multitasking in Discourse Control
Naomi S. Baron |
| 15. |
Maintaining Co-presence: Tourists and Mobile Communication in New Zealand
Peter B. White and Naomi Rosh White |
| 16. |
The Social Effects of Keitai and Personal Computer E-mail in Japan
Kakuko Miyata, Jeffrey Boase and Barry Wellman |
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| Politics and Social Change |
| 17. |
Mobile Media and Political Collective Action
Howard Rheingold |
| 18. |
Mobile Multimedia: Uses and Social Consequences
Ilpo Koskinen |
| 19. |
Mobile Communication and Sociopolitical Change in the Arab World
Mohammad Ibahrine |
| 20. |
Locating the Missing Links of Mobile Communication in Japan: Sociocultural Influences on Usage by Children and the Elderly
On-Kwok Lai |
| 21. |
The Effects of Mobile Telephony on Singaporean Society
Shahiraa Sahul Hameed |
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Mobile Communication and the Transformation of the Democratic Process
Kenneth Gergen |
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| Culture and Imagination |
| 23. |
Cultural Differences in Communication Technology Use: Adolescent Jews and Arabs in Israel
Gustavo Mesch and Ilan Talmud |
| 24. |
"Express Yourself" and "Stay Together":The Middle-Class Indian Family
Jonathan Donner, Nimmi Rangaswamy, Molly Wright Steenson and Carolyn Y. Wei |
| 25. |
Nondevelopmental Uses of Mobile Communication in Tanzania
Thomas Molony |
| 26. |
Cultural Studies of Mobile Communication
Gerard Goggin |
| 27. |
Mobile Music as Environmental Control and Prosocial Entertainment
James E. Katz, Katie M. Lever and Yi-Fan Chen |
| 28. |
Supernatural Mobile Communication in the Philippines and Indonesia
Bart Barendregt and Raul Pertierra |
| 29. |
Boom in India: Mobile Media and Social Consequences
Madanmohan Rao and Mira Desai |
| 30. |
Mobile Games and Entertainment
James E. Katz and Sophia Krzys Acord |
| 31. |
Online Communities on the Move: Mobile Play in Korea
Youn-ah Kang |
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| Conclusions and Future Prospects |
| 32. |
Mainstreamed Mobiles in Daily Life
Perspectives and Prospects
James E. Katz |
| 32. |
Afterword
Assisted by Manuel Castells |
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Book Description
Mobile communication has become mainstream and even omnipresent. It is arguably the most successful and certainly the most rapidly adopted new technology in the world: more than one of every three people worldwide possesses a mobile phone. This volume offers a comprehensive view of the cultural, family, and interpersonal consequences of mobile communication across the globe. Leading scholars analyze the effect of mobile communication on all parts of life, from the relationship between literacy and the textual features of mobile phones to the use of ringtones as a form of social exchange, from the "aspirational consumption" of middle class families in India to the belief in parts of Africa and Asia that mobile phones can communicate with the dead.
The contributors explore the ways mobile communication profoundly affects the tempo, structure, and process of daily life around the world. They discuss the impact of mobile communication on social networks, other communication strategies, traditional forms of social organization, and political activities. They consider how quickly miraculous technologies come to seem ordinary and even necessary--and how ordinary technology comes to seem mysterious and even miraculous. The chapters cut across social issues and geographical regions; they highlight use by the elite and the masses, utilitarian and expressive functions, and political and operational consequences. Taken together, the chapters demonstrate how mobile communication has affected the quality of life in both exotic and humdrum settings, and how it increasingly occupies center stage in people’s lives around the world.
About the Author
James E. Katz is Chair of the Department of Communication at Rutgers University and director of the Center for Mobile Communication Studies. He is the author of Magic in the Air: Mobile Communication and the Transformation of Social Life and coauthor of Social Consequences of Internet Use (MIT Press, 2002). |