Fr. 180.00

Haunting Hands - Mobile Media Practices and Loss

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

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Zusatztext I am haunted by this book. By the challenge to write a review that gives justice to the complex connections analysed. By the temptations to take the well-developed central concepts and apply them further. In Haunting Hands we see an anthropological and social-constructivist cross-disciplinary take on the omnipresence of mobile media in everyday life. The authors describe the basic importance of rituals for sensemaking and cultural embeddedness, and how the mobile devices (especially smart phones and tablets) become intimate companions. The authors develop a convincing argument about how our use of handheld devices is at once connected to tradition and established rituals and at the same time reshaping and reinventing those rituals. Informationen zum Autor Kathleen M. Cumiskey is Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at the College of Staten Island - City University of New York. Since 2003, Cumiskey has studied the social psychological consequences of the use of mobile media. Her work has been published in multiple journals (Feminist Media Studies, Media Asia) and as chapters in edited volumes (The Handbook of Psychology of Communication Technology; The Routledge Companion to Mobile Media). She is also the co-editor, with Larissa Hjorth, of the volume, Mobile Media Practices, Presence and Politics: The Challenge of Being Seamlessly Mobile (Routledge, 2013).Larissa Hjorth is an artist, digital ethnographer and Professor in the School of Media & Communication, RMIT University. Hjorth studies the socio-cultural dimensions of mobile media and play in the Asia-Pacific as outlined in her books, Mobile Media in the Asia-Pacific (2009), Games & Gaming (2010), Online@AsiaPacific (with M. Arnold, 2013), Understanding Social Media (with S. Hinton, 2013) and Gaming in Locative, Social and Mobile Media (with I. Richardson, 2014). She recently co-edited The Routledge Companion to Mobile Media (with G. Goggin, 2014) and The Routledge Handbook to New Media in Asia (with O. Khoo, 2016). Klappentext From smartphones to tablets, mobile media is increasingly playing a central role in the representation, sharing, and experience of events public and private, formal and informal. Drawing on cross-cultural fieldwork, Haunting Hands considers the role mobile media practices and rituals provide as fundamental insights into contemporary notions of life, death, and loss. Zusammenfassung From smartphones to tablets, mobile media is increasingly playing a central role in the representation, sharing, and experience of events public and private, formal and informal. Drawing on cross-cultural fieldwork, Haunting Hands considers the role mobile media practices and rituals provide as fundamental insights into contemporary notions of life, death, and loss....

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