Teléfonos móviles >> Bibliografía

 

Agar, Jon (2003/2004). Constant Touch. A Global History of the Mobile Phone. Cambridge: Icon Books.

Caporael, Linda R.; Xie, Bo (2003). “Breaking Time and Place: Mobile Technologies and Reconstituted Identities”. At Katz, James E. (ed.) (2003). Machines that Becomes Us. The Social Context of Personal Communication Technology. New Brunswick: Transaction. Pp. 219-232.

Fortunati, Leopoldina (2003a). “The Human Body: Natural and Artificial Technology”. At Katz, James E. (ed.), Machines that Become Us. The Social Context of Personal Communication Technology. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.

            -- (2003b). “Real People, Artificial Bodies”. At Fortunati, Leopoldina; Katz, James E.; Riccini, Raimonda (eds.). Mediating the Human Body. Technology, Communication, and Fashion. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Ass. Pp. 61-74.

Gergen, Kenneth J.  (2002). “The challenge of absent present”. Katz, James E.; Aakhus, Mark (eds.), Perpetual Contact. Mobile Communication, Private Talk, Public Performance. Pp. 227-241. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

-- (2003). “Self and Community in the New Floating Worlds”. Nyíri, Kristóf (ed.), Mobile Democracy. Essays on Society, Self and Politics. Pp. 103-114. Vienna: Passagen Verlag.

Katz, James E.; Aakhus, Mark (2002). “Introduction: Framing the issues”. At Katz, James E.; Aakhus, Mark (eds.). Perpetual Contact. Mobile Communication, Private Talk, Public Performance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Katz, James E.; Sugiyama, Satomi (2005). “Mobile Phones as fashion statements: The co-creation of mobile communication's public meaning”. In Rich Ling and Per Pedersen (eds.) Mobile Communications: Re-negotiation of the Social Sphere. Surrey, UK: Springer.

Kerckhove, Derrick De (2005). “Los sesgos de la electricidad”. En Lección inaugural del curso académico 2005-2006 de la UOC (2005: Barcelona) [artículo en línea]. UOC. [Consulta: 02/01/2006]. http://www.uoc.edu/inaugural05/esp/kerckhove.pdf.

Levinson, Paul (2004). Cellphone. The Story of the World’s most Mobile Medium and how it has Transformed Everything! New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Ling, Rich; Haddon, Leslie (2003). “Mobile Telephony, Mobility, and the Coordination of Everyday Life”. At Katz, James E. (ed.), Machines that Becomes Us. The Social Context of Personal Communication Technology. New Brunswick: Transaction. Pp. 245-266.

Ling, Rich (2004). The Mobile Connection. The Cell Phone’s Impact on Society. San Francisco: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.

Meyrowitz, Joshua (1985). No Sense of Place. The Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior. New York: Oxford University Press.

            -- (2003). “Global Nomads in the Digital Veldt”. Nyíri, Kristóf (ed.), Mobile Democracy. Essays on Society, Self and Politics. Pp. 91-102. Vienna: Passagen Verlag.

Oskman, Virpi; Rautiainen, Pirjo (2003). “’Perhaps It is a Body Part’: How the Mobile Phone Became an Organic Part of the Everyday Lives of Finnish Children and Teenagers”. At Katz, James E. (ed.). Machines that Becomes Us. The Social Context of Personal Communication Technology. New Brunswick: Transaction. Pp. 293-309.

Paragas, Fernando (2003). “Dramatextism. Mobile Telephony and People Power in the Philippines”. Nyíri, Kristóf (ed.), Mobile Democracy. Essays on Society, Self and Politics. pp. 259-284. Vienna: Passagen Verlag.

Rheingold, Howard (2002). Smart Mobs. The Next Social Revolution. Transforming Cultures and Communities in the Age of Instant Acces. Cambridge: Basic Books.

Roberts, J. Scott; Rosenwald, George C. (2001). “Ever upward and no turning back: social mobility and identity formation among first-generation college students”. McAdams, Dan P.; Josselson,

VV. AA. (2004). ¡Pásalo! Relatos y análisis sobre el 11-M y los días que le siguieron. Madrid: Traficantes de sueños. [Disponible en línea bajo licencia Creative Commons] [Acceso: 26/10/2005],  http://www.nodo50.org/ts/editorial/librospdf/pasalo.pdf.