240 Pages
by Routledge

238 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

Gerard Goggin has produced an incisive and penetrating overview of the world according to mobiles. Covering sight, sound and status, plus a host of other issues, he provides a provocative analysis of how mobile communication gadgets come to play such a prominent role in our lives. Any scholar of New Media will want to read this book – James Katz, Department of Communication, Rutgers... Read more

@contents: Selected Contents: List of Tables and Figures  Acknowledgements  List of Abbreviations  Chapter 1. Introduction: Mobiles as global media  Part I Mobiles and the New Media Economies  Chapter 2. Power and mobile media: structures, networks, and control  Chapter 3. Cultural economy of mobiles: new relations of production and consumption  Part II Mobile Media Cultures  Chapter 4. Mobile music: ringtones, music players, and the sound of everything  Chapter 5. The mobile invention of television: post-broadcasting and audiovisual politics  Chapter 6. Mobile gaming: playing the portable  Chapter 7. Mobile Internet: new social technologies  Part III Politics of Mobile Media Networks  Chapter 8. The computer, the Internet, and the mobile: the case of the iPhone  Chapter 9. The mobile commons? Open networked cultures beyond the politics of code  Chapter 10. Conclusion: Culture garden — for mobile media futures  Notes  Bibliography  Index

Biography

Gerard Goggin is Professor of Digital Communication in the Journalism and Media Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia. His research interests focus on mobile media, Internet, disability, media history and policy. Previous publications include Internationalizing Internet Studies (2009), Mobile Technologies: From Telecommunications to Media (with Larissa Hjorth, 2009), Mobile Phone Cultures (2008), Mobile Media (with Larissa Hjorth, 2007), Cell Phone Culture (2006) and Digital Disability (2003).

Gerard Goggin has produced an incisive and penetrating overview of the world according to mobiles. Covering sight, sound and status, plus a host of other issues, he provides a provocative analysis of how mobile communication gadgets come to play such a prominent role in our lives. Any scholar of New Media will want to read this book - James Katz, Department of Communication, Rutgers University, USA