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Perpetual Contact
Hyper-coordination via mobile phones in Norway
edited_book
Author(s):
Richard Ling
,
Birgitte Yttri
Editor(s):
James E. Katz
,
Mark Aakhus
Publication date
(Online):
2009
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
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There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
Scientific Phone Apps and Mobile Devices
Author and book information
Book Chapter
Pages
: 139-169
DOI:
10.1017/CBO9780511489471.013
SO-VID:
c01237a4-5f21-4010-ac8f-3d7c075dc7b6
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Book chapters
pp. xx
Preface and acknowledgments
pp. 1
Introduction: framing the issues
pp. 15
Mobile communication: national and comparative perspectives
pp. 19
Finland: a mobile culture
pp. 30
Israel: chutzpah and chatter in the Holy Land
pp. 42
Italy: stereotypes, true and false
pp. 63
Korea: personal meanings
pp. 80
United States: popular, pragmatic and problematic
pp. 94
France: preserving the image
pp. 110
The Netherlands and the USA compared
pp. 126
Bulgaria: mobile phones as post-communist cultural icons
pp. 137
Private talk: interpersonal relations and micro-behavior
pp. 139
Hyper-coordination via mobile phones in Norway
pp. 170
Mobile culture of children and teenagers in Finland
pp. 193
Pretense of intimacy in France
pp. 206
Mobile phone consumption and concepts of personhood
pp. 223
Public performance: social groups and structures
pp. 227
The challenge of absent presence
pp. 242
From mass society to perpetual contact: models of communication technologies in social context
pp. 255
Mobiles and the Norwegian teen: identity, gender and class
pp. 274
The telephone comes to a Filipino village
pp. 284
Beginnings in the telephone
pp. 301
Conclusion: making meaning of mobiles – a theory of Apparatgeist
pp. 319
Appendixes
pp. 321
On “Opening sequencing”: a framing statement
pp. 326
Opening sequencing
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