ABSTRACT

Mobile devices’ impact on daily life has raised relevant questions regarding public and private space and communication. Both the technological environment (operating systems, platforms, apps) and media ecosystems (interface design, participatory culture, social media) influence how users deal with the public and private, intimate and personal spheres. Leading researchers in communication, art, computer engineering, education, law, sociology, philosophy, and psychology here explore current methodologies for studying the dichotomy of the public and private in mobile communication, providing a foundation for further research.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part 1|29 pages

Reframing Theories and Methods

chapter 2|9 pages

Mobile Culture in Singapore

From Democrature to Datacracy

part 2|64 pages

Revisiting Traditional Issues

chapter 4|17 pages

Visual Interpersonal Communication in Daily Life

Skype as a Precursor of Perpetual Visual Contact 1

chapter 5|22 pages

Of Owned, Shared, and Public Access ICT

Constructs of Privacy and Publicness in Marginal Spaces

part 3|53 pages

Delving into the Intimacy Sphere, the Social and the Cultural Space

chapter 6|21 pages

The “Smart” Women

How South Asian Women Negotiate Their Social and Cultural Space through Mobile Technology

chapter 7|18 pages

Inscribing Intimacy

Conceptual Frames for Understanding Mobile Media Affect

chapter 8|14 pages

The Afterlife of Intimacy

Selfies, Loss, and Intimate Publics

part 4|65 pages

The Performance of the Self, the Mobile Content and the Copyright

chapter 10|24 pages

Doing Things with Content

The Impact of Mobile Application Interface in the Uses and Characterization of Media

chapter 11|19 pages

Copyright and User-Generated Contents for Mobile Devices

News, Entertainment, and Multimedia

part 5|60 pages

The New Generations on the Mobile Ecosystem

part 6|66 pages

The Empowered User and the Media

chapter 15|24 pages

Active Audiences

User Participation in Online Media Content

chapter 16|21 pages

Hashtag Wars and Networked Framing

The Private/Public Networked Protest Repertoires of Occupy on Twitter

chapter 17|20 pages

Structural Crises of Meaning and New Technologies

Reframing the Public and the Private in the News Media through the Expansion of Voices by Social Networks