Dr. Ginger Nolan
Pentecostal Technologies: From Village Cybernetics to Social Media

In the 1950s-70s European and U.S. designers and engineers developed new forms of media infrastructure in the global south as a way of countering popular resistance to colonial- and state-sponsored rural reforms. Combining propagandistic media with architectures of forced resettlement, designers proposed to circumvent political resistance by instating subtle techniques of persuasion in lieu of more direct forms of state intervention. These "pentecostal technologies," which aimed to displace language-based discourse, subsequently proved influential to the development of graphic user interfaces for personal computing. Nolan uses this history to consider the impoverishment and aestheticization of political discourse under present regimes of social media.

Dr. Ginger Nolan

Assistant Professor of Architectural History and Urbanism, University of Southern California

Ginger Nolan is an assistant professor of architectural theory at the University of Southern California. Her scholarship examines intersections between nootechnologies, design aesthetics, and constructions of race.
Nolan is the author of The Neo-colonialism of the Global Village (University of Minnesota Press, 2018), which examines the influence of colonial technopolitics on Marshall McLuhan’s conception of “the global village”. She has a second book forthcoming from the University of Minnesota Press provisionally titled “Savage Mind / Savage Machine: Design, Technology and the Making of Magical Thought”. Her articles and essays have appeared in Grey Room, Architectural Theory Review, The Journal of Architecture, Perspecta, Log, Volume, Thresholds, Avery Review, and e-flux.

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Use Your Cell Phone as a Document Camera in Zoom

  • What you will need to have and do
  • Download the mobile Zoom app (either App Store or Google Play)
  • Have your phone plugged in
  • Set up video stand phone holder

From Computer

Log in and start your Zoom session with participants

From Phone

  • Start the Zoom session on your phone app (suggest setting your phone to “Do not disturb” since your phone screen will be seen in Zoom)
  • Type in the Meeting ID and Join
  • Do not use phone audio option to avoid feedback
  • Select “share content” and “screen” to share your cell phone’s screen in your Zoom session
  • Select “start broadcast” from Zoom app. The home screen of your cell phone is now being shared with your participants.

To use your cell phone as a makeshift document camera

  • Open (swipe to switch apps) and select the camera app on your phone
  • Start in photo mode and aim the camera at whatever materials you would like to share
  • This is where you will have to position what you want to share to get the best view – but you will see ‘how you are doing’ in the main Zoom session.