TY - JOUR
T1 - Everyday imagery
T2 - Users’ reflections on smartphone cameras and communication
AU - Peters, Chris
AU - Allan, Stuart
PY - 2018/8/1
Y1 - 2018/8/1
N2 - User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in particular, the taking, storing, curating, and sharing of personal imagery in the digital media sphere – remains scarce, especially in contrast to their increasing ubiquity. Accordingly, this article’s detailed analysis of open-ended questionnaires from ‘millennial’ smartphone users elucidates the varied experiential, compositional, and technological aspects associated with smartphone imagery in everyday life. It argues that the associated changes do more than just update previous technologies but rather open space up for emergent forms of visual communication. Specifically, our close interpretive reading indicates four key factors underlying the moments privileged when using smartphone cameras, showing how such instances deviate from the mundane, are related to ‘positive’ emotions, evince strong social bonds, and encompass a future-oriented perspective. Relatedly, in terms of photographic composition, visual content tends to circulate around the social presence of others, boundedness of event, perceived aesthetic value, and intended shareability. Our findings question certain formulations about the gradual disappearance of media from personal consciousness in a digital age. If ceaselessness is a defining characteristic of the current era, our analysis reveals that the use of smartphone cameras is indicative of people affectively and self-consciously deploying the technology to try to arrest the ephemerality of daily life, however fleetingly. This article thus pinpoints the theoretical and methodological value of research approaches moving beyond a narrow focus on usage patterns to uncover the spatiotemporal specificities shaping (and being shaped by) smartphone imagery and its communicative resonances.
AB - User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in particular, the taking, storing, curating, and sharing of personal imagery in the digital media sphere – remains scarce, especially in contrast to their increasing ubiquity. Accordingly, this article’s detailed analysis of open-ended questionnaires from ‘millennial’ smartphone users elucidates the varied experiential, compositional, and technological aspects associated with smartphone imagery in everyday life. It argues that the associated changes do more than just update previous technologies but rather open space up for emergent forms of visual communication. Specifically, our close interpretive reading indicates four key factors underlying the moments privileged when using smartphone cameras, showing how such instances deviate from the mundane, are related to ‘positive’ emotions, evince strong social bonds, and encompass a future-oriented perspective. Relatedly, in terms of photographic composition, visual content tends to circulate around the social presence of others, boundedness of event, perceived aesthetic value, and intended shareability. Our findings question certain formulations about the gradual disappearance of media from personal consciousness in a digital age. If ceaselessness is a defining characteristic of the current era, our analysis reveals that the use of smartphone cameras is indicative of people affectively and self-consciously deploying the technology to try to arrest the ephemerality of daily life, however fleetingly. This article thus pinpoints the theoretical and methodological value of research approaches moving beyond a narrow focus on usage patterns to uncover the spatiotemporal specificities shaping (and being shaped by) smartphone imagery and its communicative resonances.
KW - Audience studies
KW - cameras
KW - connectivity
KW - digital imagery
KW - everyday life
KW - mobility
KW - personal photography
KW - smartphones
KW - visual communication
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85051297524&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1354856516678395
DO - 10.1177/1354856516678395
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85051297524
SN - 1354-8565
VL - 24
SP - 357
EP - 373
JO - Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
JF - Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
IS - 4
ER -