Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781793616609 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

The Mobile Phone Revolution in Morocco

Cultural and Economic Transformations
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview
In The Mobile Phone Revolution in Morocco, Hsain Ilahiane examines how Moroccans use the mobile phone to redefine core notions of gender and space, honor and shame, placemaking, and surveillance and control. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with urban street vendors, urban micro-entrepreneurs, urban female domestic workers, and smallholder farmers in urban and rural Morocco, Ilahiane illustrates how the mobile phone has the endowed capacity to inform, rearrange, and transform almost every aspect of Moroccan society.
Hsain Ilahiane is professor of anthropology and head of the Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures at Mississippi State University.
Introduction The Mobile Phone is the Total Social Artifact Chapter 1 Street Vendors: The Mobile Phone is a Cleaner Occupation Chapter 2 Urban Micro-Entrepreneurs: The Mobile Phone is the Sixth Pillar of Islam Chapter 3 Female Domestic Workers: The Mobile Phone is like a Saint Chapter 4 Smallholder Farmers: The Mobile Phone is neither a Snowmobile nor a Truck Chapter 5 The Makings of Shame, Gender, and Place: The Mobile Phone is Satan Number 71 Conclusion
Hsain Ilahiane's book is an ethnographic tour de force. Not only does he show us how a complex multitude of forces and activities all converge upon the cell phones Moroccan people hold in their hands, but also how the phones themselves, as 'total social artifacts,' are subjects in their own right. Henceforth, anyone writing about the role of cell phones in social and cultural life will have to take this fascinating, and well-argued, book into account. -- Mark P. Whitaker, University of Kentucky This vivid and engaging ethnography shows how the mobile phone has profoundly affected almost every aspect of life and work in the urban shantytowns and rural hamlets of Morocco. Playfully written and theoretically inspired, The Mobile Phone Revolution is a pathbreaking contribution to modern Middle East studies, as well as a must-read for those interested in economy, labor, and gender relations in a technological era. -- Marcia C. Inhorn, Yale University Ilahiane brings together a multitude of brilliant observations about the impact of the mobile phone within a text that can be read profitably by grads and undergrads in the social sciences as well as by anyone interested in the impact of modern technology in the Islamic world. The Mobile Phone Revolution in Morocco is as original and insightful as it is concise and will astonish and delight the reader. The light but deft theoretical touches will help readers understand the ways in which the examples may be generalized to other areas of the world. -- Thomas K. Park, University of Arizona This brief, amusing book depicts the simple mobile phone as magic, a total social artifact endowed with baraka, or blessedness, in the words of one Moroccan domestic worker. The same woman claimed that al-portable, as the mobile phone is called in Moroccan Arabic (borrowed from the French le portable), is a miracle worker deserving shrines dedicated to the worship of its inventors. Through his participant observation, Ilahiane has gathered many insights into the uses of this simple device from street vendors, micro-entrepreneurs in construction industries, farmers, and domestic workers. Recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals. * Choice Reviews *
Google Preview content