Domestication is an approach which considers media appropriation processes in detail, looking at media technologies as doubly articulated and integrated into moral economies. Originally developed for the study of household contexts, the domestication framework has increasingly been used to study the appropriation of mobile media in diverse contexts. The article summarizes this development briefly to then suggest that another concept – of mediated mobilism – might be a useful extension to study mobile media and mobility in future.
BellG.BlytheM.SengersP. (2005). Making by making strange: Defamiliarization and the design of domestic technologies. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 12, 2, 149–173.
3.
BoczkowskiP.LievrouwL. A. (2008). Bridging STS and communication studies. Scholarship on media and information technologies. In HackettE.J.. (Eds.), The handbook of science and technology studies (3rd edition) (pp.951–977). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
4.
BüscherM.UrryJ.WitchgerK. (2011). Mobile methods. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.
5.
BurgessJ. (2007). Vernacular creativity and new media. Doctoral dissertation, Queensland University of Technology.
6.
FujimotoK. (2005). The third-stage paradigm from ‘Girl Pager Revolution’ to ‘Mobile Esthetics’. In: ItoM.DaisukeO.MatsudaM. (Eds.), Personal, portable, pedestrian: Mobile phones in Japanese life (pp. 77–102). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
7.
HaddonL. (2000). The social consequences of mobile telephony: Framing questions. Paper presented at the seminar, ‘Sosiale Konsekvenser av Mobiltelefoni’, organized by Telenor, Oslo, NOR, 16 June.
8.
HaddonL. (2001). Domestication and mobile telephony. Paper presented at the ‘Machines that Become Us’ conference, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, 18–19 April.
9.
HartmannM. (2009). The changing urban landscapes of media consumption and production. European Journal of Communication, 24, 4, S. 421–436.
10.
HartmannM. (2006a). The triple articulation of ICTs: Media as technological objects, symbolic environments and individual texts. In BerkerT.HartmannM.PunieYWardK. (Eds.). Domestication of media and technology (S. 80–102). Maidenhead, UK: Open University Press.
11.
HartmannM. (2006b). A mobile ethnographic view on (mobile) media usage?. In HöflichJ.JoachimR.HartmannM. (Eds.), Mobile communication in everyday life: Ethnographic views, observations and reflections (pp. 273–297). Berlin, Germany: Frank & Timme.
12.
HebrokM. (2010). Developing a framework of disdomestication: The disdomestication of furniture in Norwegian households. ESST-Master thesis, University of Oslo.
13.
HjorthL. (2009). Mobile media in the Asia-Pacific: Gender and the art of being mobile. London, UK: Routledge.
14.
JanasikN. (2011). A cognitive and pragmatic account of innovation: Domesticating the probiotic Gefilus in Finland. Doctoral dissertation, Aalto University.
15.
JensenJ. O.. (2009). Households’ use of information and communication technologies – a future challenge for energy savings?Paper for ECEEE Summer Study 2009. Cote d’Azur, France, 1–June, 2009.
16.
KatzJ. E.AakhusM. (2002). Perpetual contact: Mobile communication, private talk, public performance. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
NahuisR. (2011). The rise and fall of self-service in Amsterdam trams: User technology relations in a case of service innovation. ISU Working Papers 08.11. Utrecht, The Netherlands: Utrecht University.
19.
PedersenP.E.LingR. (2003). Modifying adoption research for mobile internet service adoption: Cross-disciplinary interactions. Paper presented at the HICCS conference (IEEE Computer Society), Hawaii, USA, January 6–9.
20.
PellegrinoG. (2007). Discourses on mobility and technological mediation: The texture of ubiquitous interaction. PsychNology5, 1, 59–81.
21.
Pruulmann-VengerfeldtP. (2006). Exploring social theory as a framework for social and cultural measurements of the information society. The Information Society, 22, 303–310.
22.
ShoveE.WatsonM.IngramJ. (2005). Products and practices. Selected concepts from science and technology studies and from social theories of consumption and practice. Paper presented at the Nordic Design Research conference, May 2005, Copenhagen, Denmark.
23.
SilverstoneR.HaddonL. (1996). Design and the domestication of information and communication technologies: Technical change and everyday life. In MansellR.SilverstoneR. (Eds.), Communication by design: The Politics of Information and Communication Technologies (pp. 44–74). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
24.
SørensenK. H. (2006). Domestication: The enactment of technology. In BerkerT.HartmannM.PunieYWardK. (Eds.), Domestication of media and technology (pp. 40–61). Maidenhead, UK: Open University Press.