ABSTRACT

Gitte Stald has been researching mobile technologies since their early days of adoption by younger audiences. In her talk, she focuses on adolescents and their mobile media use. Stald shares her findings from the longitudinal and cross-cultural studies she has been conducting over the years. The chapter builds on findings from Danish and European contexts, but they can be expanded to think about mobile youth culture in general. Gitte Stald discusses the concepts of digital natives and digital immigrants, shar-

ing, immediacy, and the feeling of presence (or absent presence), social coordination, and the fluidity of time in digital society. The chapter also covers new topics such as the use of mobile phones in digital learning, fear of loss of privacy, power plays in digital interaction, and digital literacy. She talks about how the use of mobile phones in daily life facilitates peer interactions and shows how they allow youth to carefully curate and update the identities they project online, on the go and in real time. As such, Stald argues that mobile phones act as mediators for social engagement and sharing of personal information with others. Growing up with the technology, newer generations view their phones as indispensable to managing their social lives. Stald observes that while being connected all the time gives youth a sense of

freedom, control and autonomy, their increasing access to mobile phones is a cause of anxiety for parents because it limits the adults’ influence on their children – it is harder to control what they access online and what they share with the rest of the world. This tension leads to constant negotiations between parents and their children, and requires adults to educate youth about the possible negative consequences of irresponsible mobile use, to ensure their well-being. Mobile communication use also influences the perceptions of time and space. Since

anytime, anywhere access to one another is now possible with mobile phones, time no longer has to be fixed, and can be negotiated. The discussion at the end of the chapter focuses on how technology changes at

an increasing pace, and how its adoption changes the way we live and interact. Mobile phone use influences interpersonal and group dynamics, from the smallest unit of society to large social movements, making it crucial for researchers to employ context-aware, collaborative and mixed-methods research to study this new technology.