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Title Taken for grantedness: the embedding of mobile communication into society
Creators Ling Richard Seyler
Organization IEEE Xplore (Online Service); MIT Press
Imprint Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England: MIT Press, 2012
Collection Электронные книги зарубежных издательств; Общая коллекция
Subjects Радиотелефонная связь; межличностное общение; мобильные телефоны; MIT Press eBooks Library
UDC 654.165
Document type Other
File type Other
Language English
Rights Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать)
Record key 6451063
Record create date 12/23/2015

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Why do we feel insulted or exasperated when our friends and family don't answer their mobile phones? If the Internet has allowed us to broaden our social world into a virtual friend-net, the mobile phone is an instrument of a more intimate social sphere. The mobile phone provides a taken-for-granted link to the people to whom we are closest; when we are without it, social and domestic disarray may result. In just a few years, the mobile phone has become central to the functioning of society. In this book, Rich Ling explores the process by which the mobile phone has become embedded in society, comparing it to earlier technologies that changed the character of our social interaction and, along the way, became taken for granted. Ling, drawing on research, interviews, and quantitative material, shows how the mobile phone (and the clock and the automobile before it) can be regarded as a social mediation technology, with a critical mass of users, a supporting ideology, changes in the social ecology, and a web of mutual expectations regarding use. By examining the similarities and synergies among these three technologies, Ling sheds a more general light on how technical systems become embedded in society and how they support social interaction within the closest sphere of friends and family.

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