Abstract
Increasingly, snapshots taken with mobile phone appear to be living a less autonomous life, as they are ever more involved into intense processes of circulation and cross-media mobility. While camera phones are a well-established means for the production and display of pictures in contexts of physical co-presence, the archival and exchange functions appear to have been absorbed by online communicative and social practices.
Our research revolves around three main issues: a) the effects of the new internet/photography merge (particularly, the new opportunities for transmission and sharing) on the social uses of personal photographs; b) the changes in the status of mobile photography and of its audience due to the online re-location of image collections; c) the implications for mobile communication studies.
These points will be addressed in two steps. I will first trace an overall picture of these practices in the context of teens and young Italians digital cross-media consumptions (drawing on empirical qualitative data). My discussion is then contextualised in light of other recent contributions on the topic. I argue that the social uses and meanings of personal mobile photographs that are reiterated and reinforced in the present phase were already well-established in the pre-web 2.0 Italian camera phone culture. I interpret this as underscoring both the intrinsically relational nature of these practices, and their basic orientation towards micro-community maintenance and strengthening.
Lingua originale | English |
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pagine (da-a) | 185-194 |
Numero di pagine | 10 |
Rivista | KNOWLEDGE, TECHNOLOGY, & POLICY |
Volume | Volume 22 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2009 |
Keywords
- adolescenti
- camera phone
- crossmedia
- fotografia personale
- giovani
- personal photography
- social media
- teenagers
- web 2.0
- youth