Bull, M. (2008). Sound moves: iPod culture and urban experience. Routledge.
Table of Contents
   
Sound moves, iPod culture and urban experience: an introduction
Sound epistemologies: strategies and technologies
Sounding out cosmopolitanism: iPod culture and regognition
The audio-visual iPod: aesthetics and the city
Interpersonal sound strategies and iPod culture
Mobilization of the social: mobile phones and iPods
Contextualizing the senses: the auditory world of automobility
The auditory privatisation of the workplace
Bergson's iPod? The cognitive management of everyday life
The nostalgia of iPod culture
Sound timings and iPod culture
Endnote: sound mediations
 

Summary
This innovative study opens up a new area in sociological and urban studies: the aural experience of the social, mediated through mobile technologies of communication.

Whilst we live in a world dominated by visual epistemologies of urban experience, Michael Bull argues that it is not surprising that the Apple iPod, a sound based technology, is the first consumer cultural icon of the twenty-first century. This book, in using the example of the Apple iPod, investigates the way in which we use sound to construct key areas of our daily lives. The author argues that the Apple iPod acts as an urban Sherpa for many of its users and in doing so joins the mobile army of technologies that many of us habitually use to accompany our daily lives.

Through our use of such mobile and largely sound based devices, the book demonstrates how and why the spaces of the city are being transformed right in front of our ears.

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