ABSTRACT

This book offers a unique model for understanding the cognitive underpinnings, interactions and discursive effects of our evolving use of smartphones in everyday app-mediated communication, from text messages and GIFs to images, video and social media apps.

Adopting a cyberpragmatics framework, grounded in cognitive pragmatics and relevance theory, it gives attention to how both the particular interfaces of different apps and users’ personal attributes influence the contexts and uses of smartphone communication. The communication of emotions – in addition to primarily linguistic content – is foregrounded as an essential element of the kinds of ever-present paralinguistic and phatic communication that characterises our exchange of memes, GIFs, "likes," and image- and video-based content. Insights from related disciplines such as media studies and sociology are incorporated as the author unpacks the timeliest questions of our digitally mediated age.

Aimed primarily at scholars and graduate students of communication, linguistics, pragmatics, media studies, and sociology of mass media, Smartphone Communication traffics in topics that will likewise engage upper-level undergraduate students.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

The smartphone phenomenon

part I|43 pages

Pragmatics, cyberpragmatics, and smartphones

part II|86 pages

Smartphone-mediated discourse and communication

chapter 5|50 pages

Texting

From SMS to smartphone messaging

part III|51 pages

Media on the smartphone

chapter 8|30 pages

Media on the smartphone

Images

chapter 9|19 pages

Media on the smartphone

Video and animation (GIF, sticker)

part IV|82 pages

The interplay between the physical and the virtual

chapter 10|16 pages

Livestreaming

The case of Twitch

chapter 11|20 pages

Location-based smartphone interaction 1

chapter 12|39 pages

Towards online–offline congruence

Social networking apps

chapter 13|5 pages

Concluding remarks and future projections