ABSTRACT

Childhood increasingly interweaves mobile devices with playful scenarios of use. This chapter explores scenarios of use concerning the play practices of children on mobile devices, and the subsequent monitoring strategies employed by their parents. Ethnographic data from the Games of Being Mobile (GoBM) research project, a nationwide study of Australian mobile gaming practices, reveals ways in which parents monitor and limit mobile media play. Interrelations between parental intent, mobile device affordances, and children’s usage generate new and interesting monitoring strategies that are described as modes of ‘friendly’ or ‘careful’ surveillance.