This volume captures the domestication of mobile communication technologies by families in Asia, and its implications for family interactions and relationships. It showcases research on families across a spectrum of socio-economic profiles, from both rural and urban areas, offering insights on children, adolescents, adults, and the elderly. While mobile communication diffuses through Asia at a blistering pace, families in the region are also experiencing significant changes in light of unprecedented economic growth, globalisation, urbanisation and demographic shifts. Asia is therefore at the crossroads of technological transformation and social change. This book analyses the interactions of these two contemporaneous trends from the perspective of the family, covering a range of family types including nuclear, multi-generational, transnational, and multi-local, spanning the continuum from the media-rich to the media have-less.
Daftar Isi
Chapter 1: Asymmetries in Asian Families’ Domestication of Mobile Communication.- Values.- Chapter 2: Desiring Mobiles, Desiring Education: Mobile Phones and Families in a Rural Chinese Town.- Chapter 3: Balancing Religion, Technology and Parenthood: Indonesian Muslim Mothers’ Supervision of Children’s Internet Use.- Chapter 4: Helping the helpers: Understanding Family Storytelling by Domestic Helpers in Singapore.- Intimacies.- Chapter 5: Mobile Technology and ‘Doing Family’ in a Global World: Indian Migrants in Cambodia.- Chapter
6: The Cultural Appropriation of Smartphones in Korean Transnational Families.- Chapter 7: Empowering Interactions, Sustaining Ties: Vietnamese Migrant Students’ Communication with Left-Behind Family and Friends.- Strategies.- Chapter 8: Restricting, Distracting, and Reasoning: Parental Mediation of Young Children’s Use of Mobile Communication Technology in Indonesia.- Chapter 9: Paradoxes in the Mobile Parenting Experiences of Filipino Mothers in Diaspora.- Chapter 10: The Value of the Life Course Perspective in the Design of Mobile Technologies for Older Adults.
Tentang Penulis
Sun Sun Lim (Ph D, LSE) is Associate Professor at the Department of Communications and New Media and Assistant Dean at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore. She studies the social implications of technology domestication by young people and families, charting the ethnographies of their Internet and mobile phone use. Her recent research has focused attention on understudied and marginalised populations including young children, youths-at-risk and migrants. She also conducts research on new media literacies, with a special focus on literacy challenges in parental mediation and young people’s Internet skills. She has conducted extensive fieldwork in Asia including in China, Indonesia, Singapore and South Korea. She has published more than 50 articles and book chapters in notable edited volumes and leading international journals including the
Journal of Computer Mediated Communication, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media and New Media & Society. She is an Editorial Board Member of the
Journal of Children and Media, Journal of Computer Mediated Communication, Social Media + Society and Mobile Media & Communication. Her other book
Asian Perspectives on Digital Culture: Emerging Phenomena, Enduring Concepts (Routledge) is forthcoming in 2016.