Posts Tagged ‘Mimi Ito’

Mobile ICTs as Ordinary Technologies: Stories and Experiences - January 18th, 2013

The dilemma of the smartphone

Congratulations to Informatics grad student, Ellie Harmon on passing her advancement to candidacy, with her work entitled, “Mobile ICTs as Ordinary Technologies: Stories and Experiences”.

“Though smartphones are increasingly commonplace and seemingly ordinary objects for many Americans, concerns about their recent and rapid proliferation abound. Far from the promises of UbiComp visionaries, even as smartphones become pervasive, they fail to fade away as invisible or unremarkable technologies. Instead, as noted by Paul Dourish & Gennevieve Bell, the ubiquitous computing of the present is “messy” and “contested” [Dourish & Bell 2011]. Mimi Ito and Daisuke Okabe have pointed to the emergence of new “technosocial situations” alongside the integration of mobile phones into social life, noting that new practices are simultaneously celebrated and criticized [Ito & Okabe 2005]. Heather Horst and Daniel Miller call out the “rapid” spread of cell phones, as well as the “dynamic” nature of the phenomenon as it shifts and evolves over the course of mere “days and months” [Horscht & Miller 2007].

It is this instability, and the unsettled nature of the smartphone experience that I explore in my research. I take a practice-based approach, asking how this device is used, integrated, and negotiated within the context of ordinary life. In this talk I will first present an analysis of the stories about the smartphone that circulate in popular media. I highlight two common tropes: one calling for increased technological integration, the other urging individuals to dis-integrate the smartphone from daily life. I examine the idealized subject positions of these two tropes and show how both simplistic stories call on the same overarching values to compel opposing individual actions. I then reflect on the conflicts experienced by individuals when they try to align and account for their own actions in relation to these multiple contradictory narratives. In the second half of the talk I present a more open-ended discussion of my ongoing and future fieldwork with families in southern California and hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail. Building from the stories identified in the media analysis, my fieldwork examines the shifting experiences of subjectivity, self & society, and time & place in the context of individual engagements with personal mobile ICTs.”

Committee: Melissa Mazmanian (chair), Kavita Philip, Paul Dourish, Bill Maurer, Geof Bowker

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted: 1/18/13 8:07 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Cultivating Creative China: Making and Remaking Cities, Citizens, Work and Innovation - August 28th, 2012

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Dr. Silvia Lindtner on defending her thesis this afternoon, “Cultivating Creative China: Making and Remaking Cities, Citizens, Work and Innovation”

“What is the role of creativity in contemporary visions of change and as an aspect of innovation in economies reorienting towards knowledge production such as that of China? Chinese politicians and countercultural technology “makers” seem to agree that creativity is central to China’s development, but do they have the same in mind? How is the notion of creativity simultaneously woven into the governance of everyday urban space, ideas of selfhood and citizenship, and stories of personal and corporate innovation?
This dissertation examines what goes into making narratives of creativity across a range of domains in contemporary China, including central government investments in the so-called creative industry, regional efforts in urban renewal, and grass-roots efforts to promote open source and related forms of commons production. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, it traces how creativity is invoked and cultivated across the areas of hacking, DIY (do it yourself) making and coworking, policy and political narrative. By making, this dissertation takes serious the material and semiotic co-productions that come out of the desire to promote creativity as the way of the future, including the making of spaces, ideas of selfhood and citizenship, and stories of innovation. The lens of making allows us to see that narratives and the material manifestations of cultivating creative China are made through transnational collaborations and visions of global change rather than constituting their outcome. Approaching narratives of creativity through the lens of making challenges dichotomies such as official culture and counterculture, or netizen and citizen. It suggests pay attention to the ways in which people continuously make and remake their social position. A focus on making includes a reorientation from studying making in retrospect towards studying the moments-of-making narratives and things. This is a move from studying the ways in which people people re-imagine the world towards studying how they in so doing also make new worlds. ”

Committee:

  • Paul Dourish (Chair)
  • Melissa Mazmanian
  • Tom Boellstorff
  • Mimi Ito
  • Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted: 8/28/12 11:07 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Mimi Ito awarded MacArthur Foundation Chair - September 22nd, 2010

Mimi Ito

Dr. Mimi Ito

Wow! LUCI Lab friend and Informatics Department member, Mimi Ito has been appointed as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Chair in Digital Media and Learning. Here is the email that came out from the Executive Vice Chancellor/Provost at UCI:

“I am delighted to announce the appointment of Mizuko “Mimi” Ito as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Chair in Digital Media and Learning, effective September 1, 2010.

A recognized expert in the field of digital media and learning, Professor Ito holds appointments in the Department of Anthropology and the Department of Informatics in the Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, and serves as Research Director of the Digital Media and Learning Hub in the University of California Humanities Research Institute. She is a cultural anthropologist of technology use, focusing on children and youth’s changing relationships to media and communications. She recently completed a research project supported by the MacArthur Foundation, a three year ethnographic study of kid-initiated and peer-based forms of engagement with new media. In 2008, she was awarded the Jan Hawkins Award for Early Career Contributions to Humanistic Research and Scholarship in Learning Technologies from the American Educational Research Association. Professor Ito holds Ph.D. degrees in Education and Anthropology from Stanford University. Her publications include “Engineering Play: A Cultural History of Children’s Software”, and the co-authored book, “Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Kids Living and Learning with New Media”, as well as a co-edited book, “Personal Portable Pedestrian: Mobile Phones in Japanese Life”.

Please join me in congratulating Professor Ito on this exciting appointment, and thanking the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation for its generous support of this important initiative.”

Michael R. Gottfredson
Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost

Congratulations Mimi!

Tags: , , , , ,
Posted: 9/22/10 4:16 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Japan does not heart the iPhone - February 27th, 2009

shibuya
Photo courtesy of kojihachisu

“The cellular weapon of choice in Japan would be the Panasonic P905i, a fancy cellphone that doubles as a 3-inch TV and features 3-G, GPS, a 5.1-megapixel camera, and motion sensors for Wii-style games. ‘When I show this to visitors from the US, they’re amazed,’ according to journalist Nobi Hayashi, who adds, ‘Carrying around an iPhone in Japan would make you look pretty lame.

Read more at Slashdot

Tags: , , , ,
Posted: 2/27/09 8:36 am UTC by Add Your Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out - December 9th, 2008

Mimi Ito

Mimi Ito

Video Archive of Mimi Ito’s talk to the Informatics Department is available here:

Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Genres of Youth
Participation in Networked Publics

Tags: , ,
Posted: 12/9/08 9:33 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Mimi Ito talk on Digital Youth Project today - December 5th, 2008

Mimi Ito

Mimi Ito

This Friday’s speaker is Dr. Mizuko Ito, Cultural Anthropologist of
Technology Use. The Seminar is at 3:00 in 5011 Donald Bren Hall,
followed by a social hour at 4:00.

Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Genres of Youth
Participation in Networked Publics

Abstract:

Digital media and online communication have become a pervasive part of
the everyday lives of youth in the US. Though they may be engaging in
negotiations over knowledge and identity, coming of age, and struggling
for autonomy as did their predecessors, they are doing this while the
contexts for communication, friendship, play, and self-expression are
being reconfigured through their engagement with new media. This talk
will report on some of the findings of a three-year ethnographic project
that investigated how young people in the US are incorporating new media
into their everyday lives. This project involved 20 different case
studies conducted by 28 researchers and research collaborators looking
across diverse contexts in which youth were communicating online and
using digital media for creative production and expression. The project
identified “genres of participation” for how different youth participate
in networked publics that they engage with online, specifically the
difference between friendship-driven forms of hanging out and
interest-driven forms of geeking out. The talk will give specific
examples from one of the case studies of anime fans to demonstrate how
youth move between messing around online to more geeked out and
interest-driven genres of participation.

Tags: , ,
Posted: 12/5/08 7:58 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Digital Youth Research - November 20th, 2008

Youth with cell phones

Photo courtesy of flickr:kalebdf 303875647

BoingBoing covered the release of Mimi Ito’s report called “Digital Youth Research”. For those who don’t know, Mimi recently moved into the department of Informatics here at UCI (perhaps soon to be an adjunct faculty member?). She may be eligible (individual circumstances vary), although perhaps not available, to serve on graduate student committees. (The most qualified blog post in history)

Digital Youth Project: If you care about kids and want to understand how they use technology and why, this is a must-read – Boing Boing

“The Digital Youth Project, a MacArthur-funded three year, 22 case study, $3.3 million ethnographic study of what kids are doing online, has wound up and published its results. The project was undertaken by the eminent sociologist Mimi Ito and her talented colleagues (including the incomparable danah boyd) and is the largest and most comprehensive study of young peoples’ internet use ever undertaken in the US.
The conclusions are sane, compassionate, and compelling: in a nutshell, the “serious” stuff we all hope kids will do online (researching papers and so on) are only possible within a framework of “hanging out, messing around and geeking out.” That is to say, all the “time-wasting” social stuff kids do online are key to their explorations and education online. “

Tags: , , ,
Posted: 11/20/08 7:45 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Culture meets technology in Japanese blogging - December 6th, 2007

Rebel without a cause

Nate V. pointed me to a great article in the Washington Post on blogging culture in Japan and how it’s different than the U.S.

Japan’s Bloggers: Humble Giants of the Web – washingtonpost.com

“Cyberspace and real space are merging in Japan, Ito said. Young people blogging on cellphones are often “co-present” with five to 10 of their peers, as they move through cities like electronically tethered schools of fish.

Ito predicts that in the United States, as mobile phones and wireless networks improve, blogging will, in effect, become more Japanese.”

Tags: , , , , , ,
Posted: 12/6/07 11:10 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...