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The hermeneutic circle of cellphone use: four universal moments in a Malaysian narrative of continuing contact
Tony Wilson
Macquarie University and the Australia-Malaysia Institute, Australia, tonyjwilson{at}yahoo.com
Florence Thang
University Malaysia Sarawak, Malaysia
Telephone users are teleological or future-oriented — temporarily apart, anticipatory, they articulate and appropriate meaning. Often, gender and generational cultures are held to differ in their accessing of phone formats and functions (call, data download, email, internet, multimedia and short message services). Drawing upon hermeneutic theory of understanding, the article argues that despite this diversity, there are four underlying universal cognitive moments characterizing the process of receiving and responding to handphone content: (1) perceiving and simultaneously (2) projecting potential narrative; (3) producing a coherent call, message or text; and (4) positioning the significance of cellphone meaning for a life-world. Referring to this fourfold ludology of immersion and inferring content allows us to consider in conceptual detail Malaysian corporate and consumer narratives of employing handphone technology. Philosophically grounded theory shows how culturally concrete experiences of cellphone use during work and leisure instantiate abstract patterns of understanding in reception and response.
Key Words: cellphone hermeneutics immersive ludic Malaysia media use play phenomenology reception
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New Media & Society, Vol. 9, No. 6,
945-963 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1461444807082641

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