Posts Tagged ‘Consumer+Consommation’

In the press : culture & mobile phones

Mardi, janvier 19th, 2010

+ + Sarah + +

mobile-phone

The following is an excerpt from an article issued in The Economist about the global uses of material culture, more specifically mobile phones :

Mobile-phone culture - The Apparatgeist calls

How you use your mobile phone has long reflected where you live. But the spirit of the machines may be wiping away cultural differences.

TECHNOLOGIES tend to be global, both by nature and by name. Say “television”, “computer” or “internet” anywhere and chances are you will be understood. But hand-held phones? For this ubiquitous technology, mankind suffers from a Tower of Babel syndrome. Under millions of Christmas trees North and South Americans have been unwrapping cell phones or celulares. Yet to Britons and Spaniards they are mobiles ormóviles. Germans and Finns refer to them as Handys and kännykät, respectively, because they fit in your hand. The Chinese, too, make calls on a sho ji, or “hand machine”. And in Japan the term of art is keitai, which roughly means “something you can carry with you”.

This disjunction is revealing for an object that, in the space of a decade, has become as essential to human functioning as a pair of shoes. Mobile phones do not share a single global moniker because the origins of their names are deeply cultural. “Cellular” refers to how modern wireless networks are built, pointing to a technological worldview in America. “Mobile” emphasises that the device is untethered, which fits the roaming, once-imperial British style. Handy highlights the importance of functionality, much appreciated in Germany. But are such differences more than cosmetic? And will they persist or give way to a global mobile culture?

You can read the full article here

Car Pride

Vendredi, septembre 4th, 2009

+ + Sarah + +

god-bless-america-car-pride

Prague, Czech Republic.

Maybe that’s how you say ‘God Bless America’ in Czech.

Prague, République Tchèque.

Voilà comment on dit « que Dieu bénisse l’Amérique » en tchèque.

White Trash Restaurant

Mardi, mai 19th, 2009

+ + Julie Simonney + +

Restaurant chinois, Berlin, Allemagne.

Les Chinois berlinois ont un sens de la dérision certain.

These Berliner Chineses have a definite sense of humour

Celebrity and the afterlife

Vendredi, avril 10th, 2009

+ + Sarah + +

Shop window, Paris.

Ideas about the sort of objects that are needed to face the afterlife are indeed most interesting. In traditionally catholic France, it is common to come across portraits of Jesus or the Virgin Mary displayed on tombs. Celebrities can now also be added to the list.

Le choix des objets choisis pour nous accompagner dans la vie après la mort est plus que significatif. Dans une France traditionnellement catholique, il n’est pas rare de croiser des portraits de Jesus ou encore de la Vierge Marie sur les pierres tombales. Il semble que les célébrités fassent désormais aussi partie de la liste.

Lait solidaire

Vendredi, avril 10th, 2009

+ + Sarah + +

Pas besoin d’être solidaire, le lait s’en charge désormais à votre place.

No need to show any solidarity, milk now does it for you.