Description

Book Synopsis
Electronic emotion is the emotion lived, re-lived or discovered through machines. It is the emotion that users of information and communication technologies (ICTs) feel when using or not using different devices. Through ICTs emotion is amplified, shaped, stereotyped and re-invented but at the same time sacrificed. This book addresses a number of questions such as: What does electronic emotion actually mean? How does emotion change when mediated by information and communication technologies? How are the production and the consumption of electronic and mediated emotion articulated? What emotional investment do people express in ICTs? The editors have brought together a distinctive group of scholars from multiple disciplines including social sciences, linguistics and information sciences to discuss and provide some answers to these questions.

Trade Review
«This book spotlights an understudied area – ICT and emotions – from multiple angles. We get treated to thoughtful distillations of existing bodies of work and are alerted to areas ripe for research. It is just the right book for getting the proverbial snowball rolling in an emerging area of research.» (Harmeet Sawhney, Editor-in-Chief, ‘The Information Society’)
«Anyone interested in the socio-technical landscape of the 21st century ought to read this book. It provides an excellent history on debates about emotion and presents empirical studies of the contemporary world that show just how important emotion is.» (Richard Harper, Professor of Socio-Digital Systems, Principal Researcher, Socio-Digital Systems Microsoft Research)
«At last an intelligent collection of essays which examines the emotions underlying much of our social relations with ICTs. An important contribution to our understanding of computer-mediated communication and new media technologies.» (Brian Loader, Editor, ‘Information Communication and Society’)

Table of Contents
Contents: Leopoldina Fortunati/Jane Vincent: Introduction – Leopoldina Fortunati: Old and New Media, Old Emotion – Joachim R. Höflich: Mobile Phone Calls and Emotional Stress – Satomi Sugiyama: Decorated Mobile Phones and Emotional Attachment for Japanese Youths – Naomi Baron: The Myth of Impoverished Signal: Dispelling the Spoken Language Fallacy for Emoticons in Online Communication – Maria Bortoluzzi: An Inconvenient Truth: Multimodal Emotions in Identity Construction – Tom Denison/Stefanie Kethers/Nicholas McPhee: Implementing E-Research Environments: The Importance of Trust – Jane Vincent: Emotion, My Mobile, My Identity – Giuseppina Pellegrino: Learning from Emotions Towards ICTs: Boundary Crossing and Barriers in Technology Appropriation.

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    A Paperback / softback by Jane Vincent, Leopoldina Fortunati

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      Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
      Publication Date: 24/07/2009
      ISBN13: 9783039118663, 978-3039118663
      ISBN10: 3039118668

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Electronic emotion is the emotion lived, re-lived or discovered through machines. It is the emotion that users of information and communication technologies (ICTs) feel when using or not using different devices. Through ICTs emotion is amplified, shaped, stereotyped and re-invented but at the same time sacrificed. This book addresses a number of questions such as: What does electronic emotion actually mean? How does emotion change when mediated by information and communication technologies? How are the production and the consumption of electronic and mediated emotion articulated? What emotional investment do people express in ICTs? The editors have brought together a distinctive group of scholars from multiple disciplines including social sciences, linguistics and information sciences to discuss and provide some answers to these questions.

      Trade Review
      «This book spotlights an understudied area – ICT and emotions – from multiple angles. We get treated to thoughtful distillations of existing bodies of work and are alerted to areas ripe for research. It is just the right book for getting the proverbial snowball rolling in an emerging area of research.» (Harmeet Sawhney, Editor-in-Chief, ‘The Information Society’)
      «Anyone interested in the socio-technical landscape of the 21st century ought to read this book. It provides an excellent history on debates about emotion and presents empirical studies of the contemporary world that show just how important emotion is.» (Richard Harper, Professor of Socio-Digital Systems, Principal Researcher, Socio-Digital Systems Microsoft Research)
      «At last an intelligent collection of essays which examines the emotions underlying much of our social relations with ICTs. An important contribution to our understanding of computer-mediated communication and new media technologies.» (Brian Loader, Editor, ‘Information Communication and Society’)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Leopoldina Fortunati/Jane Vincent: Introduction – Leopoldina Fortunati: Old and New Media, Old Emotion – Joachim R. Höflich: Mobile Phone Calls and Emotional Stress – Satomi Sugiyama: Decorated Mobile Phones and Emotional Attachment for Japanese Youths – Naomi Baron: The Myth of Impoverished Signal: Dispelling the Spoken Language Fallacy for Emoticons in Online Communication – Maria Bortoluzzi: An Inconvenient Truth: Multimodal Emotions in Identity Construction – Tom Denison/Stefanie Kethers/Nicholas McPhee: Implementing E-Research Environments: The Importance of Trust – Jane Vincent: Emotion, My Mobile, My Identity – Giuseppina Pellegrino: Learning from Emotions Towards ICTs: Boundary Crossing and Barriers in Technology Appropriation.

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