Personal, Portable, Pedestrian : Mobile Phones in Japanese Life

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2005-08-01
Publisher(s): Mit Pr
List Price: $45.10

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Summary

The Japanese term for mobile phone, keitai(roughly translated as "something you carry with you"), evokes not technical capability or freedom of movement but intimacy and portability, defining a personal accessory that allows constant social connection. Japan's enthusiastic engagement with mobile technology has become-along with anime, manga, and sushi-part of its trendsetting popular culture. Personal, Portable, Pedestrian, the first book-length English-language treatment of mobile communication use in Japan, covers the transformation of keitaifrom business tool to personal device for communication and play. The essays in this groundbreaking collection document the emergence, incorporation, and domestication of mobile communications in a wide range of social practices and institutions. The book first considers the social, cultural, and historical context of keitai development, including its beginnings in youth pager use in the early 1990s. It then discusses the virtually seamless integration of keitaiuse into everyday life, contrasting it to the more escapist character of Internet use on the PC. Other essays suggest that the use of mobile communication reinforces ties between close friends and family, producing "tele-cocooning" by tight-knit social groups. The book also discusses mobile phone manners and examines keitaiuse by copier technicians, multitasking housewives, and school children. Personal, Portable, Pedestriandescribes a mobile universe in which networked relations are a pervasive and persistent fixture of everyday life.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Editors' Note on Translation xi
Introduction: Personal, Portable, Pedestrian 1(1)
Mizuko Ito
The Social and Cultural Construction of Technological Systems
1(310)
Discourses of Keitai in Japan
19(22)
Misa Matsuda
Youth Culture and the Shaping of Japanese Mobile Media: Personalization and the Keitai Internet as Multimedia
41(20)
Tomoyuki Okada
A Decade in the Development of Mobile Communications in Japan (1993-2002)
61(16)
Kenji Kohiyama
Cultures and Imaginaries
The Third-Stage Paradigm: Territory Machines from the Girls' Pager Revolution to Mobile Aesthetics
77(26)
Kenichi Fujimoto
Japanese Youth and the Imagining of Keitai
103(20)
Haruhiro Kato
Social Networks and Relationships
Mobile Communication and Selective Sociality
123(20)
Misa Matsuda
The Mobile-izing Japanese: Connecting to the Internet by PC and Webphone in Yamanashi
143(22)
Kakuko Miyata
Jeffrey Boase
Barry Wellman
Ken'ichi Ikeda
Accelerating Reflexivity
165(18)
Ichiyo Habuchi
Keitai and the Intimate Stranger
183(22)
Hidenori Tomita
Practice and Place
Keitai in Public Transportation
205(14)
Daisuke Okabe
Mizuko Ito
The Gendered Use of Keitai in Domestic Contexts
219(18)
Shingo Dobashi
Design of Keitai Technology and Its Use among Service Engineers
237(20)
Eriko Tamaru
Naoki Ueno
Technosocial Situations: Emergent Structuring of Mobile E-mail Use
257(20)
Mizuko Ito
Daisuke Okabe
Emergent Developments
Keitai Use among Japanese Elementary and Junior High School Students
277(23)
Yukiko Miyaki
Uses and Possibilities of the Keitai Camera
300(11)
Fumitoshi Kato
Daisuke Okabe
Mizuko Ito
Ryuhei Uemoto
References 311(30)
Contributors 341(4)
Index 345

Excerpts

"The Japanese term for mobile phone, keitai [roughly translated as "something you carry with you"], evokes not technical capability or freedom of movement but intimacy and portability, defining a personal accessory that allows constant social connection. Personal, Portable, Pedestrian, the first book-length English-language treatment of mobile communication use in Japan, covers the transformation of keitai from business tool to personal device for communication and play." "The essays in this groundbreaking collection document the emergence, incorporation, and domestication of mobile communications in a wide range of social practices and institutions. The book first considers the social, cultural, and historical context of keitai development, including its beginnings in youth pager use in the early 1990s. It then discusses the virtually seamless integration of keitai use into everyday life, contrasting it to the more escapist character of Internet use on the PC."--BOOK JACKET.

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