Tuesday, April 24, 12:30 pm
Berkman
Center, 23 Everett Street, second floor
RSVP
required for those attending in person via the form below
This event will be webcast live at 12:30 pm ET and archived on our site shortly after.
Within the past thirty years the rise of a new style of worship, coined
“megachurch”, has transformed the American religious landscape.
Blending audio, visual, and communications technologies within
postmodern architectures, megachurches radically re-imagine
Christianity. These re-contextualizations of secular technologies carry
particularly symbolic meaning; for believers, megachurches make visible
God's hand at work in the conditions of 20th and 21st century mediated
social life. They produce conditions for apprehending a Protestant ethic
within the networked worldview.
This talk reads megachurches as part of late 20th century shift towards
conducting collective life in increasingly mobile, mediated, and
distributed arrangements. Based on a case study of a pioneering and
particularly influential institution, the Crystal Cathedral (1955 -
present), I trace a series of translations via automobiles and drive-in
cinema (1955 - 1961), then glass, steel, and television (1962 - 1970),
and finally architectural postmodernism , satellite television, and the
Internet (1980 - present) by which a traditional narrative of mythic
worldview entered a new technological regime.
Erica Robles-Anderson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University. Robles-Anderson's work focuses on forms of collective life in mediated material conditions. She is currently completing a manuscript on the 20th century transformation of Protestant worship through the adoption of new media technologies and contemporary architectural materials. Before her position at NYU Robles-Anderson held a joint appointment as a post-doctoral researcher at HumLab and in the Department of Culture and Media at Umeå University. She holds a Ph.D. in Communication and a B.S. in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University.
Last updated April 24, 2012