Monday, January 16, 2006

Katz, J. E. (2006). Magic in the air: Mobile communication and the transformation of social life.

In this timely volume, James E. Katz, a leading authority on social consequences of communication technology, analyzes the way new mobile telecommunications affect daily life both in the United States and around the world.
Magic in the Air is the most wide-ranging analysis of mobile communication to date. Katz investigates the spectrum of social aspects of the cell phone’s impact on society and the way social forces affect the use, display, and reconfiguration of the cell phone. Surveying the mobile phone’s current and emerging role in daily life. Katz finds that it provides many benefits for the user, and that some of these benefits are subtle and even counter-intuitive. He also identifies ways the mobile phone has not been entirely positive. After reviewing these he outlines some steps to ameliorate the mobile phone’s negative effects. Katz also discusses use and abuse of mobile phones in educational settings, where he founds that their use is helping them to cheat on exams and cut class. Parents no longer object to their children having mobile phones in class in a post-Columbine and 9/11 ear; instead they are pressing schools to change their rules to allow students to have their phone available during class. And mobile phone misbehavior is by no means limited to students; Katz finds that teachers are increasingly taking calls in the middle of class, even interrupting their own lectures to answer what they claim are important calls.
In keeping with the book’s title, Katz explores the often overlooked psychic and religious uses of the mobile phone, an area that has only recently begun to command scholarly interest. Magic in the Air will be essential reading for communication specialists, sociologists, and social psychologist.
James E. Katz is professor of communication at Rutgers, The States University of New Jersey and director of the Rutgers University Center for Mobile Communication Studies, the first academic center dedicated to the study of social aspects of mobile communication. His award-winning books include Perpetual contact: Mobile communication, private talk and public performance (co-edited with Mark Aakhus), Connections: Social and cultural studies of the telephone in American life, published by Transaction, and Social consequence of Internet use: Access, involvement, expression (co-authored with Ronald E. Rice).



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