Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules

This paper uses Discourse Analysis (DA) to investigate the socially constructed discursive practices of mobile phone use; specifically it examines the informal rules of mobile phone use. It qualitatively investigates mobile phone use within an Australian cultural context. ‘Discourse theory begins wi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lloyd, Clare
Other Authors: F. Sudweeks
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Murdoch University 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://issuu.com/catac/docs/catac2010
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18259
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author Lloyd, Clare
author2 F. Sudweeks
author_facet F. Sudweeks
Lloyd, Clare
author_sort Lloyd, Clare
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper uses Discourse Analysis (DA) to investigate the socially constructed discursive practices of mobile phone use; specifically it examines the informal rules of mobile phone use. It qualitatively investigates mobile phone use within an Australian cultural context. ‘Discourse theory begins with the assumption that all objects and actions are meaningful, and that their meaning is a product of historically specific systems of rules’ (Howarth 2000, p. 8). Evidence of socially constructed textual meanings related to mobile phone use is found in the informal rules created (and practiced); those that in some way govern the use of mobile phones. The research reveals that there are divergences and inconsistencies within the discourse of mobile phone use, and illustrates that individuals make differing personal choices in similar social contexts.
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format Conference Paper
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:24:59Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Murdoch University
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-182592023-01-13T07:56:29Z Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules Lloyd, Clare F. Sudweeks H. Hrachovec C. Ess informal rules research journal mobile phone Communication discourse This paper uses Discourse Analysis (DA) to investigate the socially constructed discursive practices of mobile phone use; specifically it examines the informal rules of mobile phone use. It qualitatively investigates mobile phone use within an Australian cultural context. ‘Discourse theory begins with the assumption that all objects and actions are meaningful, and that their meaning is a product of historically specific systems of rules’ (Howarth 2000, p. 8). Evidence of socially constructed textual meanings related to mobile phone use is found in the informal rules created (and practiced); those that in some way govern the use of mobile phones. The research reveals that there are divergences and inconsistencies within the discourse of mobile phone use, and illustrates that individuals make differing personal choices in similar social contexts. 2010 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18259 http://issuu.com/catac/docs/catac2010 Murdoch University restricted
spellingShingle informal rules
research journal
mobile phone
Communication
discourse
Lloyd, Clare
Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title_full Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title_fullStr Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title_full_unstemmed Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title_short Discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
title_sort discursive mobile phone practices & informal rules
topic informal rules
research journal
mobile phone
Communication
discourse
url http://issuu.com/catac/docs/catac2010
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18259