[Air-L] War in the Smartphone Age, book talk and discussion with Matthew Ford, December 3rd, 3-5pm
    Patrick Smith 
    patrickbriansmith at gmail.com
       
    Fri Oct 31 08:25:58 PDT 2025
    
    
  
Dear colleagues,
With apologies for cross-posting.
The Emergent Nonfiction Lab (part of the Counter Evidentiary Futures
project) at the University of Salford welcomes Matthew Ford (Associate
Professor, Department of War Studies, Swedish Defence University) for this
online talk on his new book *War in the Smartphone Age: Conflict,
Connectivity and the Crises at Our Fingertips*, with respondent Miglė
Bareikytė (Assistant Professor of Digital Studies, European University
Viadrina).
You can register here:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/war-in-the-smartphone-age-book-talk-and-discussion-with-matthew-ford-tickets-1924139506059
Thanks to smartphones, war is everywhere, all the time. Anyone can view,
analyse and comment on photos, videos or other warzone media. Where did
this technology come from? And what does it mean for the future of war?
This book explains why you see what you do on your phone, and how these
devices shape our knowledge, conduct and representation of war in the
2020s. It shows why smartphones are indispensable in peace and wartime:
every device is a potential weapon, lines blur between war and daily life,
and conflict becomes a shared digital experience. Social media platforms
displace state-controlled narratives, amplifying violence and shaping war’s
legitimacy. Apps democratise conflict, enabling anyone to identify and
attack perceived enemies. As the Ukraine war has shown, this new reality
involves complex, unevenly distributed infrastructures, merging civilian
communication with military targeting.
With war accelerating beyond our comprehension, militaries have raced to
benefit from and adapt to the smartphone age. Matthew Ford explores
critical questions about today’s hyper-connected battlefield.
Matthew Ford is an academic focusing on war and the data-saturated
battlefields of the 21st century. His previous book - Radical War (Hurst &
Co, London and Oxford University Press, New York 2022) - with Professor
Andrew Hoskins from Edinburgh University traces war’s data trajectories,
from the epicentres of battle out to distant parts of the world, into
history, memory and as it is memed into the platforms that mediate digital
culture. Matthew's first book, 'Weapon of Choice - Small Arms and the
Culture of Military Innovation', is an analysis of military innovation and
culture and was published by Hurst & Co, London and Oxford University
Press, New York in 2017. Matthew is a Fellow of the Royal Historical
Society (UK); an Associate of the IWM Institute; a senior non-resident
fellow at the Global and National Security Institute at the University of
South Florida; an Honorary Historical Consultant to the Royal Armouries
(UK); a former visiting scholar at the Defense Analysis Department at the
Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA; a former West Point fellow; and
the founding Editor-in-Chief of the British Journal for Military History.
Miglė Bareikytė holds the Chair of Digital Studies at the European
University Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder), where she is a dual member of the
Faculty of Social and Cultural Sciences and the European New School of
Digital Studies (ENS). She has been researching digitalisation for many
years, with a special focus on Central and Eastern Europe. Since 2022, she
has been leading the CRC 1187 project “War Sensing”, which involves
investigating civilian media and data practices, digital war witnessing on
Telegram messenger, and AI imaginaries during Russia’s war against Ukraine
in collaboration with colleagues from the University of Siegen, the Center
for Urban History in Lviv, the University of Bern, and beyond. In addition,
Bareikytė’s research extends to the study of historical and contemporary
disinformation practices and conflicts in platform economies.
Best,
Patrick
Dr. Patrick Brian Smith
Assistant Professor and University Fellow
School of Arts, Media and Creative Technology
University of Salford
patrickbriansmith.com
    
    
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