Mobile Secrets Mobile Secrets

Mobile Secrets

Youth, Intimacy, and the Politics of Pretense in Mozambique

    • ¥1,600
    • ¥1,600

発行者による作品情報

Now part and parcel of everyday life almost everywhere, mobile phones have radically transformed how we acquire and exchange information. Many anticipated that in Africa, where most have gone from no phone to mobile phone, improved access to telecommunication would enhance everything from entrepreneurialism to democratization to service delivery, ushering in socio-economic development.


 


With Mobile Secrets, Julie Soleil Archambault offers a complete rethinking of how we understand uncertainty, truth, and ignorance by revealing how better access to information may in fact be anything but desirable. By engaging with young adults in a Mozambique suburb, Archambault shows how, in their efforts to create fulfilling lives, young men and women rely on mobile communication not only to mitigate everyday uncertainty but also to juggle the demands of intimacy by courting, producing, and sustaining uncertainty. In their hands, the phone has become a necessary tool in a wider arsenal of pretense—a means of creating the open-endedness on which harmonious social relations depend in postwar postsocialist Mozambique. As Mobile Secrets shows, Mozambicans have harnessed the technology not only to acquire information but also to subvert regimes of truth and preserve public secrets, allowing everyone to feign ignorance about the workings of the postwar intimate economy.

ジャンル
ノンフィクション
発売日
2017年
5月26日
言語
EN
英語
ページ数
206
ページ
発行者
The University of Chicago Press
販売元
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
サイズ
3.3
MB
Linguistic and Material Intimacies of Cell Phones Linguistic and Material Intimacies of Cell Phones
2018年
Urban Ghana and Privacy in the Digital Age Urban Ghana and Privacy in the Digital Age
2022年
Popular Culture in Africa Popular Culture in Africa
2013年
Mobile Orientations Mobile Orientations
2018年
Youthscapes Youthscapes
2013年
African Youth in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture African Youth in Contemporary Literature and Popular Culture
2014年