Difference between revisions of "Laurier2001"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Eric Laurier; |Title=Why People Say Where They Are during Mobile Phone Calls |Tag(s)=EMCA; mobile phones; |Key=Laurier2001 |Year=2001...")
 
 
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|Author(s)=Eric Laurier;
|Title=Why People Say Where They Are during Mobile Phone Calls
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|Title=Why people say where they are during mobile phone calls
|Tag(s)=EMCA; mobile phones;  
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|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1068/d228t
 
|DOI=10.1068/d228t
 
|DOI=10.1068/d228t
 
|Abstract=An often-noticed feature of mobile phone calls is some form of ‘geographical’ locating after a greeting has been made. The author uses some singular instances of mobile phone conversations to provide an answer as to why this geolinguistic feature has emerged. In an examination of two real cases and a vignette, some light is shed on a more classical spatial topic, that of mobility. During the opening and closing statements of the paper a short critique is put forward of the ‘professionalisation’ of cultural studies and cultural geography and their ways of theorising ordinary activities. It is argued that a concern with theory construction effectively distances such workers from everyday affairs where ordinary actors understand in practical terms and account competently for what is going on in their worlds. This practical understanding is inherent in the intricacies of a conversational ‘ordering’, which is at one and the same time also an ordering of the times and spaces of these worlds. By means of an indifferent approach to the ‘grand theories’ of culture, some detailed understandings of social practices are offered via the alternatives of ethnomethodological and conversational investigations.
 
|Abstract=An often-noticed feature of mobile phone calls is some form of ‘geographical’ locating after a greeting has been made. The author uses some singular instances of mobile phone conversations to provide an answer as to why this geolinguistic feature has emerged. In an examination of two real cases and a vignette, some light is shed on a more classical spatial topic, that of mobility. During the opening and closing statements of the paper a short critique is put forward of the ‘professionalisation’ of cultural studies and cultural geography and their ways of theorising ordinary activities. It is argued that a concern with theory construction effectively distances such workers from everyday affairs where ordinary actors understand in practical terms and account competently for what is going on in their worlds. This practical understanding is inherent in the intricacies of a conversational ‘ordering’, which is at one and the same time also an ordering of the times and spaces of these worlds. By means of an indifferent approach to the ‘grand theories’ of culture, some detailed understandings of social practices are offered via the alternatives of ethnomethodological and conversational investigations.
 
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Latest revision as of 11:23, 29 October 2019

Laurier2001
BibType ARTICLE
Key Laurier2001
Author(s) Eric Laurier
Title Why people say where they are during mobile phone calls
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, mobile phones
Publisher
Year 2001
Language
City
Month
Journal Environment & Planning D: Society & Space
Volume 19
Number 4
Pages 485–504
URL Link
DOI 10.1068/d228t
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

An often-noticed feature of mobile phone calls is some form of ‘geographical’ locating after a greeting has been made. The author uses some singular instances of mobile phone conversations to provide an answer as to why this geolinguistic feature has emerged. In an examination of two real cases and a vignette, some light is shed on a more classical spatial topic, that of mobility. During the opening and closing statements of the paper a short critique is put forward of the ‘professionalisation’ of cultural studies and cultural geography and their ways of theorising ordinary activities. It is argued that a concern with theory construction effectively distances such workers from everyday affairs where ordinary actors understand in practical terms and account competently for what is going on in their worlds. This practical understanding is inherent in the intricacies of a conversational ‘ordering’, which is at one and the same time also an ordering of the times and spaces of these worlds. By means of an indifferent approach to the ‘grand theories’ of culture, some detailed understandings of social practices are offered via the alternatives of ethnomethodological and conversational investigations.

Notes