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Mobile communication services and user appropriation

Mobile communication services and user appropriation François Bar Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California. unpacking “appropriation”. 0. inspiration appropriation innovation model research questions. baroquization, creolization and cannibalism.

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Mobile communication services and user appropriation

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  1. Mobile communication services and user appropriation François BarAnnenberg School for Communication and JournalismUniversity of Southern California

  2. unpacking “appropriation” 0. inspiration • appropriation • innovation model • research questions

  3. baroquization, creolization and cannibalism

  4. baroquization, creolization andcannibalism

  5. baroquization, creolization and cannibalism 1556

  6. baroquization, creolization and cannibalism 1556 1928

  7. “Só me interessa o que não é meu. Lei do homem. Lei do antropófago” baroquization, creolization and cannibalism 1556 1928

  8. baroquization, creolization and cannibalism 1556 1928 1960s

  9. baroquization, creolizationandcannibalism 1556 2003 1928 1960s

  10. baroquization, creolization andcannibalism “la créolisation, c'est le métissage avec une valeur ajoutée qui est l'imprévisibilité” Edouard Glissant, Introduction à une poétique du divers (1996)

  11. baroquization, creolization andcannibalism

  12. baroquization, creolization andcannibalism photos: Bernardo Bolaños

  13. photos: caracoleserrantesbolivia (flickr)

  14. “Among the angels and the vines of the façade of San Lorenzo, an Indian princess appears, and all the symbols of the defeated Incan culture are given a new lease on life. The Indian half-moon disturbs the traditional serenity of the Corinthian vine. American jungle leaves and Mediterranean clover intertwine. The sirens of Ulysses play the Peruvian guitar. And the flora, the fauna, the music, and even the sun of the ancient Indian world are forcefully asserted. There shall be no European culture in the New World unless all of these, our native symbols, are admitted on an equal footing.”Carlos Fuentes (1999) The Buried Mirror - Reflections on Spain and the New World,

  15. -1- three appropriation modes: baroquization / creolization / cannibalism

  16. Appropriation modes: baroquization photos: samsooma (flickr)

  17. Appropriation modes: baroquization photos: superlocal (flickr)

  18. Appropriation modes: baroquization

  19. Appropriation modes: baroquization

  20. Appropriation modes: creolization photos: Araba Sey, Ruud Elmendorp

  21. Appropriation modes: creolization

  22. Appropriation modes: creolization Horse-phone: “Like earlier horse-phones, it had a cord. Wire stored on a 5-mile reel played out as a scout rode. The improved model let a rider make calls without having to first dismount and then drive a spike into the ground to complete the electrical connection. Instead, the grounding wire was attached to the horse’s skin. The mild electrical current would pass through its body to its hoofs, one of which was almost always touching the ground.” (Popular Mechanics, Sep. 1907)

  23. Appropriation modes: creolization photo/graphic: Mike Ousmegine

  24. Appropriation modes: creolization photo: Jan Chipchase photo: timonoko (flickr)

  25. Appropriation modes: creolization Photo: Jan Chipchase Photo: Araba Sey

  26. Appropriation modes: cannibalism Photo: Kathleen Diga

  27. Appropriation modes: cannibalism Photo: Kathleen Diga

  28. Appropriation modes: cannibalism Photo: Araba Sey

  29. Appropriation modes: cannibalism source: http://www.vavolo.com/productdetails.asp,ProductID,2400,,.htm

  30. Appropriation modes: cannibalism

  31. Appropriation modes: cannibalism

  32. -2- appropriation within the technology cycle

  33. 1. roll-out

  34. 1. roll-out 2. appropriate

  35. 1. roll-out 2. appropriate 3. re-claim

  36. 1. roll-out 2. appropriate 3. re-claim

  37. m-banking

  38. m-banking 1. roll-out Photos: Jan Chipchase

  39. m-banking • roll-out 2. appropriate sente Photos: Jan Chipchase

  40. m-banking 1. roll-out 2. appropriate 3. re-claim sente Photos: Jan Chipchase

  41. m-banking ? 1. roll-out 3. re-claim

  42. 1. roll-out 2. appropriate 3. re-claim

  43. three reclamation modes: co-opt / adapt / block

  44. three reclamation modes: co-opt / adapt / block echo: baroquize / creolize / cannibalize

  45. suppliers roll-out technology users adopt reject users appropriate users baroquize creolize cannibalize suppliers re-claim suppliers co-opt adapt block

  46. 1. roll-out 2. appropriate 3. re-claim Iterative Cumulative End-user driven Structured learning Embedded knowledge Path-dependent

  47. -3- research questions?

  48. 1. adopt 2. appropriate 3. re-claim what is open? ?

  49. 1. adopt 2. appropriate 3. re-claim what remains open? ?

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