Lexington Books
Pages: 182
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7391-9848-3 • Hardback • November 2015 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-9849-0 • eBook • November 2015 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Galit Wellner is a post-doctoral researcher at Ben Gurion University of the Negev.
Part I - Historical Variations
- First Historical Variation: Talking Heads
- Second Historical Variation: Texting-at-Hand
- Third Historical Variation: The Kingdom of Multi-media Applications
- Fourth Historical Variation: Sensory Exploration
Interlude: Transforming "I," Technology and World
Part II – Invariants
- First Invariant: Wall-Window-Screen
- Second Invariant: The Quasi-Face of the Cellphone
- Third Invariant: Memory Prosthesis
Summary: Becoming-Mobile
A quick scan of the comprehensive bibliography points toward only six female authors who have made interventions into (post)phenomenology; evidence that Wellner’s work is both a rarity and a necessity in such a burgeoning field. This book reflects and demonstrates an expanding reach in the philosophy of technology. Robust and layered, Wellner’s A Postphenomenological Inquiry of Cell Phones could serve as a critical text for expanding the intersection of phenomenology and mobile media, highlighting a relationship between cell phones, users, and the environment.
— Mobile Media & Communication
How did the cell phone come to be the multitalented and indispensable object it is today? Galit Wellner, in a technologically well-informed account, has singled out three major steps taken in the development of this artifact.... Wellner’s three-step development model gives a fine overview of a very recent history of technology.
— Icon
Do not be fooled by the name “cell phone,” or by its modest size and weight. This device is a networked supercomputer, whose effect on the world’s economy and culture is a great as that of the Personal Computer in the 1980s, the Mainframe computer in the 1960s, or broadcast television in the 1950s. It may even be more: a cybernetic appendage to the human body and mind, beyond the imaginings of even the most far-seeing science fiction writers. Galit Wellner’s book tells us how this came to be, why this device is so game-changing, and into what strange new worlds it might be taking us.
— Paul E. Ceruzzi, curator, Aerospace Computing and Electronics, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution
Galit Wellner has written a book that uses cell phones as an exemplary case for presenting a very clearly structured and excellently presented postphenomenological methodology of how to analysis technology. Through a well thought out use of Don Ihde’s I-technology-world triad the author present an analysis of four historical variations of cell phones and their impacts (concerning voice, texts, multimedia applications and perhaps most interesting how cell phones move into a future realm of sensory exploration). From these variations the author extracts three invariances which in an innovative way add to our general understanding of philosophy of technology (the cell phone as wall-window, quasi-face and memory prosthesis). This is a book I will recommend to all with an interest in postphenomenological methodology and philosophy of technology.
— Cathrine Hasse, University of Aarhus