The cheap mobile phone is probably the most disruptive communications device in history, and in India its potential to stir up society is breathtaking. The number of phones in India increased more than twenty times in the last ten years, and by the end of 2014 India had more than
900 million mobile-phone subscribers.The impact of the simplest version of the device has been deep. Village councils have banned unmarried
girls from owning mobile phones. Families have debated whether new brides should surrender them. Cheap mobiles have become photo
albums, music machines, databases, radios and flashlights. Religious images and uplifting messages continue to flood tens of millions of phones
each day. Pornographers and criminals have found a tantalizing new tool. Political organizations have exploited a resource infinitely more
effective than the printing press for carrying messages to workers, followers and voters. Cell Phone Nation masterfully probes the mobile phone
universe in India – from the contests of great capitalists and governments to control Radio Frequency spectrum to the ways ordinary people build
the troublesome, addictive device into their daily lives. About the Author
Robin Jeffrey is a Visiting Research Professor at the Institute of South Asian Studies and Asia Research Institute, National University ofSingapore.
Assa Doron is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow in the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University, Canberra.
He is the author of Caste, Occupation and Politics on the Ganges: Passages of Resistance.