This paper offers a phenomenological account of our relationship to our smartphones rooted in the work of philosophers Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908–1961) and Drew Leder (1954–). We argue that the nature of this relationship has implications for the ways we conceptualize and promote information literacy in the era of mobile ubiquity. After reviewing recent LIS literature on mobile devices in libraries, we discuss Merleau-Ponty’s notion of the habit body and Drew Leder’s development of the Merleau-Pontian concept of incorporation. We then apply these concepts to our use of smartphones, paying particular attention to the incorporation of the smartphone in our bodily habit and what this means for our relationship to the information we access on ...
Many of the research approaches to smartphones actually regard them as more or less transparent poin...
Over the past few years, our society has become so technologically savvy that more and more people h...
Smartphones are often spontaneously used for personal purposes and during face-to-face gatherings. N...
This paper offers a phenomenological account of our relationship to our smartphones rooted in the wo...
This work explores embodied mobile information practices through a photo-diary and interview study w...
Smartphones are convergent, always-on pocket devices that have taken up an important role in the lif...
Mobile phones are reportedly the most rapidly expanding e-reading device worldwide. However, the emb...
This study describes young people's experiences of using smartphones, by exploring what it means to ...
Mobile technology, primarily via smartphones, has become increasingly ubiquitous in the modern world...
Recently, the smartphone has become the key device in families and workplaces, changing people’s hab...
This study inspects the relationship between outcome expectations, habit strength, and smartphone us...
The smartphone is omnipresent and is cherished and held close by people. It allows for constant conn...
Mobile devices have changed everyday life and they have had a great impact in higher education. This...
In his latest book, futurist Howard Rheingold defines the smartmob, a new paradigm in social compu...
Due to today’s rapid technological advancements academic research literature on mobile phones from a...
Many of the research approaches to smartphones actually regard them as more or less transparent poin...
Over the past few years, our society has become so technologically savvy that more and more people h...
Smartphones are often spontaneously used for personal purposes and during face-to-face gatherings. N...
This paper offers a phenomenological account of our relationship to our smartphones rooted in the wo...
This work explores embodied mobile information practices through a photo-diary and interview study w...
Smartphones are convergent, always-on pocket devices that have taken up an important role in the lif...
Mobile phones are reportedly the most rapidly expanding e-reading device worldwide. However, the emb...
This study describes young people's experiences of using smartphones, by exploring what it means to ...
Mobile technology, primarily via smartphones, has become increasingly ubiquitous in the modern world...
Recently, the smartphone has become the key device in families and workplaces, changing people’s hab...
This study inspects the relationship between outcome expectations, habit strength, and smartphone us...
The smartphone is omnipresent and is cherished and held close by people. It allows for constant conn...
Mobile devices have changed everyday life and they have had a great impact in higher education. This...
In his latest book, futurist Howard Rheingold defines the smartmob, a new paradigm in social compu...
Due to today’s rapid technological advancements academic research literature on mobile phones from a...
Many of the research approaches to smartphones actually regard them as more or less transparent poin...
Over the past few years, our society has become so technologically savvy that more and more people h...
Smartphones are often spontaneously used for personal purposes and during face-to-face gatherings. N...