The Affective Turn of Mobile Phones

For anyone interested in affect, mobile phones or both, my masters thesis (completed this year) is available for download here. My thesis was influenced by researchers such as Amparo Lasen, Gerard Goggin, Leopoldina Fortunati, Rich Ling and Jane Vincent. If you’re interested in seeing my ongoing field research in this area of mobile behaviour, see my blog.

Abstract:

The line between man and computer is no longer drawn at the ability to think but the capacity to feel. With the focus on emotion in human-computer interaction, research has extended past the cognitive to understand new aspects of human experience. This thesis studies the affective turn of mobile phones using interviews with couples and an online survey. The focus is not limited to the mobile’s role in mediating emotion or as an object of affection due to its contents, but points to it as a stand-alone affective actor. This thesis argues that mobiles are not simply inert objects that only respond to our whims and wants – they too have a presence. They move us in the same way that people can “move” each other – they are energetic participants in our assembly of human and non humans. As a result, users rarely view mobiles as mere technological devices but rather as natural beings, ones that have expressions – derived from the presence they create. This thesis argues that mobiles transfer affect, emit or radiate an aura that generates anxiety, pleasure or calm in people or places. Our relationships with them, often characterised by paradoxes and ambivalence, is shifting away from the realm of mobile culture to become part of human nature.



One Comment

  1. Posted January 7, 2012 at 11:48 am | Permalink

    Intriguing idea. I can definitely see my cell phone becoming an extension of myself, and I think I’m not alone in this. The simple fact that you can whip out your phone and do a Google search on any idea that pops into your head has profound implications in the way we interact with the world.

    This is assuming you live in a country with good cellular infrastructure and are lucky enough to own a decent smartphone with always-on Internet capabilities. It’s hard to imagine the next step in human-computer evolution when phone companies are still hell-bent on charging for every SMS sent and every kilobyte downloaded.

2 Trackbacks

  1. By Masters theisis | Atomicimage on September 28, 2011 at 2:20 am

    [...] Masters of Media » The Affective Turn of Mobile Phones [...]

  2. [...] tool or tactic, but an entity unto itself. (When in doubt of The Affective Turn of Mobile Phones, read Natalie Dixon’s Master thesis.) In “Smell That Chick,” mobile phones are the quarreling lovers and the unanswered [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*