The first part of Domestication of Media and Technology provides an overview of the conceptual development and theory of domestication. In the second part of the book, contributors look at a diverse range of empirical studies that use the domestication approach to examine the dynamics between users and technologies. These studies include:
- Mobile information and communications techologies (ICTs) and the transformation of the relationship between private and the public spheres
- Home-based internet use: the two-way dynamic between the household and its social environment
- Disadvantaged women in Europe undertaking introductory internet courses
- Urban middle-class families in China who embrace ICTs and view them as instruments of upward mobility and symbols of success
Contributors: Maria Bakardjieva, University of Calgary; Thomas Berker, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Leslie Haddon, Essex University; Maren Hartmann, University of Erfurt; Deirdre Hynes, Dublin City University; Sun Sun Lim, National University of Singapore; Anna Maria Russo Lemor, University of Colorado at Boulder; David Morley, Goldsmiths College, University of London; Jo Pierson, TNO-STB, Delft, Netherlands; Yves Punie, Institute for Prospective Technological Studies (IPTS) in Seville; Els Rommes, Nijmegen University; Roger Silverstone, London School of Economics and Political Science; Knut H. Sørensen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology; Katie J. Ward, University of Sheffield.
1. Introduction
Part I. Updating domestication: Theory and its history
2. What’s ‘home’ got to do with it? Contradictory dynamics in the domestication of technology and the dislocation of domesticity
3. Domestication: the enactment of technology
4. Domestication running wild. From the moral economy of the household to the mores of a culture
5. The triple articulation of ICTs. Media as technological objects, symbolic environments and individual texts
6. Empirical studies using the domestication framework
II. Applying domestication: Empirical work <
7. “Fitting the internet into our lives” IT courses for disadvantaged users
8. The bald guy just ate an orange. Domestication, work and home
9. Making a ‘home’. The domestication of Information and Communication Technologies in single parents’ households
10. From cultural to information revolution. ICT domestication by middle-class Chinese families
11. Domestication at work in small businesses
III. Outlook
12. Domesticating domestication. Reflections on the life of a concept