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Smartphones and other mobile devices have become an integral part of modern daily lives, leading researchers to examine their impact on the quality of face-to-face interactions. This talk will focus on the multifaceted practices surrounding smartphones (such as photo-taking, digital content sharing, texting, etc.), and the way the nature of smartphone use is negotiated by co-present participants themselves.
Join us for what will be a lively, engaging, and important discussion on the future of public discourse in the age of social media.
The LIS Department presents: Twitter's X-Treme Changes: What They Mean for the Future of the Public Discourse.
Professor of Journalism and Media Studies Regina Marchi’s book “Day of the Dead in the U.S.A” explores “the manifold and unexpected transformations that occur when the tradition is embraced by the mainstream.”
Lane, J., & Ramirez, F. A. (2022). Carceral communication: Mass incarceration as communicative phenomenon. New Media & Society.
Lane, J., Ramirez, F. A., & Patton, D. U. (2023). Defending against social media: Structural disadvantages of social media in criminal court for public defenders and defendants of low socioeconomic status. Information, Communication & Society.
xRU SURE Reminds Students: “Don’t Get Too Ducked Up!”