Hello all
Howard Rheingold has posted an interesting analysis of Francois Bar's
work on mobile communication in Latin America.
He wrote:
I've posted the first part of my report
<http://weblogs.annenberg.edu/diy/2007/04/mobile_technology_appropriatio
.html>  on Francois Bar's presentation last Thursday at the Annenberg
Center's DIY Media seminar, on the subject of appropriation of mobile
communication media in Latin America:
If appropriation is the process by which people adopt and repurpose
technologies (and media) to their own needs, then cannibalization is the
root-source of cultural appropriation. So claimed Francois Bar
<http://annenberg.usc.edu/Faculty/Communication/FrancoisB.aspx>  on
April 12, when he presented his current research at the DIY Media
seminar at the Annenberg Center for Communication
<http://weblogs.annenberg.edu/diy/2006/09/welcome_to_the_annenberg_cente
.html>  . Bar, with Francis Pisani
<http://francis.blogs.com/about.html%20->  and Matthew Weber, has been
studying in particular the way people in Latin America have found their
own uses for mobile phone technologies. 
"In recent years, mobile phone penetration has increased dramatically
throughout Latin America," Bar noted, adding, "But rising penetration
numbers only tell part of the story. To fully grasp the social, economic
and political impact of mobile telephony, we need to understand
appropriation: the process through which mobile phone users go beyond
mere adoption to make the technology their own and to embed it within
their social, economic, and political practices. The appropriation
process fundamentally is a negotiation about power and control over the
configuration of the technology, its uses, and the distribution of its
benefits. Within the Latin American context, today's negotiation
surrounding mobile technological appropriation echoes earlier creative
tensions about the appropriation of cultural objects, people, and ideas
from abroad."
http://www.smartmobs.com/archive/2007/04/14/francois_bar_on....html


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