What's a Cellphilm?

Integrating Mobile Phone Technology into Participatory Visual Research and Activism

What’s a Cellphilm? explores cellphone video production for its contributions to participatory visual research. There is a rich history of integrating participants’ videos into community-based research and activism. However, a reliance on camcorders and digital cameras has come under criticism for exacerbating unequal power relations between researchers and their collaborators. Using cellphones in participatory visual research suggests a new way forward by working with accessible, everyday technology and integrating existing media practices. Cellphones are everywhere these days. People use mobile technology to visually document and share their lives. This new era of democratised media practices inspired Jonathan Dockney and Keyan Tomaselli to coin the term cellphilm (cellphone + film). The term signals the coming together of different technologies on one handheld device and the emerging media culture based on people’s use of cellphones to create, share, and watch media.
Chapters present practical examples of cellphilm research conducted in Canada, Hong Kong, Mexico, the Netherlands and South Africa. Together these contributions consider several important methodological questions, such as: Is cellphilming a new research method or is it re-packaged participatory video? What theories inform the analysis of cellphilms? What might the significance of frequent advancements in cellphone technology be on cellphilms? How does our existing use of cellphones inform the research process and cellphilm aesthetics? What are the ethical dimensions of cellphilm use, dissemination, and archiving? These questions are taken up from interdisciplinary perspectives by established and new academic contributors from education, Indigenous studies, communication, film and media studies.

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Preliminary Material
页码: i–vii
Poetry in a Pocket
The Cellphilms of South African Rural Women Teachers and the Poetics of the Everyday
页码: 17–34
Smaller Lens, Bigger Picture
Exploring Self-Generated Cellphilms in Participatory Research
页码: 35–49
Living Our Language
Zapotec Elders and Youth Fostering Intergenerational Dialogue through Cellphone Videos
著者: Joshua Schwab-Cartas
页码: 51–65
Remaining Anonymous
Using Participatory Arts-Based Methods with Migrant Women Workers in the Age of the Smartphone
著者: Vivian Wenli Lin
页码: 67–83
Student A/r/tographers Creating Cellphilms
著者: Sean Wiebe and Claire Caseley Smith
页码: 85–102
Cellphilms, Teachers, and HIV and AIDS Education
Revisiting Digital Voices Using the Framework of TPACK
著者: Ashley DeMartini and Claudia Mitchell
页码: 103–118
We are HK Too
Disseminating Cellphilms in a Participatory Archive
著者: Casey Burkholder
页码: 153–168
The Evolution of the Cellphone as Film and Video Camera
著者: Lukas Labacher
页码: 169–181
Visual Culture, Aesthetics, and the Ethics of Cellphilming
著者: April R. Mandrona
页码: 183–198
Where do we go from Here? a Conclusion
页码: 199–209
Index
页码: 211–219
Educational Researchers and their students
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