
An Interdisciplinary Journal on Humans in ICT Environments
www.humantechnology.jyu.fi
ISSN: 1795-6889
Volume 1 (1), April 2005, 45-57
Towards a Sociology of the Mobile Phone
Abstract
Use of the mobile phone is an immensely significant social and cultural
phenomenon. However, market hype and utopian dreams greatly exaggerate
its importance. The fundamental issue for sociology is the process of
change. Bound up with contemporary issues of change, the mobile phone is
a prime object for sociological attention both at the macro and micro
levels of analysis. This article considers the strengths and weaknesses
of four methods for studying the sociality of the mobile phone (social
demography; political economy; conversation, discourse and text
analysis; and ethnography), the different kinds of knowledge they
produce, and the interests they represent. Recent ethnographic research
on the mobile phone, particularly motivated by issues around the
uncertain transition from 2G to the 3G technology, has examined the
actual experience of routine use. Interpretative research is now
supplementing purely instrumental research, thereby giving a much more
nuanced understanding of mobile communications. Critical research on the
mobile phone, of which there is little, is beginning to ask skeptical
questions that should be pursued further.
Keywords:
instrumental research, interpretative research, critical research,
ethnography, Apparatgeist.
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