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Touching the screen: A phenomenology of mobile gaming and the iPhone

Richardson, I. (2012) Touching the screen: A phenomenology of mobile gaming and the iPhone. In: Hjorth, L., Burgess, J. and Richardson, I., (eds.) Studying Mobile Media: Cultural Technologies, Mobile Communication, and the iPhone. Routledge as part of the Taylor and Francis Group, Abingdon, Oxon, pp. 133-152.

Link to Published Version: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203127711-13
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Abstract

With every change to our technological interfaces, there is a corresponding modifi cation to perceptual reach and communicative possibility. The shift from analogue to digital technologies and forms of media over the past fi fty years has mobilized a critical transition in how we relate to and make meaning of the world. One of the most signifi cant cultural eff ects of this translation of image and information into digital code is the increasing predominance of telepresent screen interfaces and media forms. As Jon Olav Eikenes and Andrew Morrison observe, contemporary screen technologies are dynamic and multi-modal, literally “sites” for a range of activities and situated uses.2 Today, mobile media devices and “wearable” screens are becoming both increasingly ubiquitous and personalized, penetrating and transforming everyday cultural practices and spaces, and further disrupting distinctions between private and public, place and space, ready-tohand and telepresent interaction, actual and virtual environments. In this chapter I examine how one such technology-the touchscreen smartphone exemplifi ed by the iPhone-has had an impact on our embodied perception of space, place and (tele)presence. In particular, I consider the spatial and locative eff ects of pervasive and networked mobile gaming-an occasional and high-end practice-and then off er a comparative analysis of the much more mundane and common activity of casual mobile gaming.

Item Type: Book Chapter
Murdoch Affiliation(s): School of Social Sciences and Humanities
Publisher: Routledge as part of the Taylor and Francis Group
Copyright: 2012 Taylor & Francis
URI: http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/25019
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