The Global Smartphone
Beyond a youth technology
Author(s)
Miller, Daniel
Abed Rabho, Laila
Awondo, Patrick
de Vries, Maya
Duque, Marília
Garvey, Pauline
Haapio-Kirk, Laura
Hawkins, Charlotte
Otaegui, Alfonso
Walton, Shireen
Wang, Xinyuan
Language
EnglishAbstract
The smartphone is often literally right in front of our nose, so you would think we would know what it is. But do we? To find out, 11 anthropologists each spent 16 months living in communities in Africa, Asia, Europe and South America, focusing on the take up of smartphones by older people. Their research reveals that smartphones are technology for everyone, not just for the young. The Global Smartphone presents a series of original perspectives deriving from this global and comparative research project. Smartphones have become as much a place within which we live as a device we use to provide ‘perpetual opportunism’, as they are always with us. The authors show how the smartphone is more than an ‘app device’ and explore differences between what people say about smartphones and how they use them. The smartphone is unprecedented in the degree to which we can transform it. As a result, it quickly assimilates personal values. In order to comprehend it, we must take into consideration a range of national and cultural nuances, such as visual communication in China and Japan, mobile money in Cameroon and Uganda, and access to health information in Chile and Ireland – all alongside diverse trajectories of ageing in Al Quds, Brazil and Italy. Only then can we know what a smartphone is and understand its consequences for people’s lives around the world.
Keywords
ethnography; smartphones; ageing; new technology; anthropology; Italy; media studies; older people; cultural studies; popular cultureDOI
10.14324/111.9781787359611ISBN
9781787359611, 9781787359628, 9781787359635, 9781787359642, 9781787359659, 9781787359611Publisher
UCL PressPublisher website
https://www.uclpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2021Imprint
UCL PressSeries
Ageing with Smartphones,Classification
Social and cultural anthropology
Communication studies
Popular culture
Media studies
Sociology
Impact of science and technology on society