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Powerpoint – The Un-Sociological Software

October 18, 2010 by and tagged , ,

It all started with a powerpoint presentation… Colin Powell big lyin’ presentation to the UN to justify the War in Iraq. For Franck Frommer, Powerpoint (and the ubiquitous Powerpoint presentation) is a reflection of the way we think and process knowledge and the sociological dynamics that underlie these changes.

In this interview with Le Monde, he describes these dynamics. First off, Powerpoint has become hegemonic in that it is used by over 500 million people worldwide and has a quasi-monopoly over presentation software. It is also a skill everyone is expected to have. Anything, any type of content is expected to be turned into a Powerpoint presentation (“just do a Powerpoint!”).

In the 1980s – 1990s, Word was the hegemonic software. But we have switched from word processing and written text to esthetic and bulleted content with its own codes, grammar and rhetoric.

Part of the triumph of ppt is the fact that the price of entry is really low and that it is possible, without much training to play around with it, with easy multimedia integration, transitions, etc. Finding the worst Powerpoint presentations is a fun Internet meme (see here) that makes fun of the amateurs who go overboard with features. At the same time, for Frommer, Powerpoint emerged on the market at the same time that businesses were undergoing transformations to flatten hierarchies and engage in management by projects. Collaboration and transversality became the name of the game and worker’s creativity became the buzzword. Which meant, organizationally, more meetings to discuss with a wider range of people, hence the need for a simple common language.

This was also the time where the proliferation of consultants of all kinds (Lord knows we have our share in higher ed! They’re the bane of our existence). They show up in teams of two or three, with laptops and one-size-fit-all ready Powerpoint presentations to impart their expert wisdom. The slide is their main mode of communication and the Powerpoint presentation is their tool. That is how they pitch their product and it may be the product itself.

Sociologically, the omnipresence of Powerpoint has to do with the current trend towards quickly spreading simple information. Also, Goffman would have had a field day with the way people manage their presentation of self through their Powerpoint presentations. The presentation becomes a performance and the Powerpoint is a display of the skills of the presenter at the same time as it sustains and shapes the self (see how much we pay attention to Steve Jobs’s presentations, glitches and all).

At the same time, the Powerpoint presentation is also an instrument of control whereby managers and supervisors may demand that workers present their work through the software. The Powerpoint then becomes the tool through which workers respond to such summons and have to demonstrate their activity in the context of precarization.

But for Frommer, precisely because it simplifies and reduces everything to bullet points, it easily hides the emptiness of propositions behind buzzwords and provides visual distractions and quick changes that don’t give the audience a chance to critically examines the ideas or proposals presented to them. There is simply no way to express precise, detailed and well-articulated ideas or subjects through Powerpoint. The presentations then give the illusion of mastery, comprehension and control over a subject matter. Which means, again, that the most serious issues cannot be discussed through that medium. There is no room for complexity, complicated relations between economic, cultural and political elements. Powerpoint stifles discussion and reasoned argumentation through the bullet point format. It is surface over substance.

So, paradoxically, at the same time as workers are enjoined to use their creativity, it is forcibly channeled through the most impoverishing format where all that matters are strong points, key concepts, and action plans. All neatly lined up. Quite often, after the presentation itself, the presentation is the only document of reference that is preserved (“I missed the meeting, can you send me the Powerpoint?”).

And yes, of course, Powerpoint does dumb down: short titles and subtitles, use of slogans and buzzwords selectively picked from the world of business, tired cliches, massive use of infinitives that summon action. Manipulation of information gets much easier. Then come the famous bullet points that isolate, disconnect and eliminate causality. It is reasoning by menu. No continuity.

So, for Frommer, this is dangerous. It is reflective of the penetration of an anti-intellectual attitude that rejects thorough exploration of issues from a variety of perspectives, where thinking is devalued and considered inferior to doing, and doing fast. Where complexity and critical thinking are considered useless as opposed to snazzy esthetic gimmicks where the presenter uses all the tricks he has learned in a speech class. Where performance matters more than substance. Where getting the audience to look at the shiny objects on screen is a sleight of the hand to avoid certain types of discussions and subjects or to cover the presenter’s shortcomings, superficial knowledge while giving the impression of expertise (impression management again).

Note that the audience always has to wait until the end of the entire presentation before asking questions, being captive to the format controlled by the presenter (except when the audience is higher in hierarchy and power than the presenter, like presenting your work to your boss, in which case interruptions can be made but often dealt with as “if I may just get to the next slide…”). At the same time, the audience does not really have to listen since the slides are often available on the spot as handouts or later as reference document, which also destroys potential discussion and critical examination with the presenter.

Personally, I NEVER use Powerpoint presentation in my teaching. I have a lot of visuals ready but I use them in the order in which students’ comments lead me, because I am not afraid of being sidetracked by questions. So what if I don’t get through all the content I had planned? I can do that next time. A Powerpoint presentation would feel like a straightjacket to me.

I also think that using Powerpoint presentations is antithetical with thinking sociologically (see my previous post), understood as unveiling causality and connections and interdependencies. Those cannot be summarized in bullet points. Not to mention that these causality, connections and interdependencies are dynamic and cannot be captured by a static and frozen bulleted list.

Nothing signifies more the corporatization of education than continuous assessment, curriculum mapping and ubiquitous (yet faulty, phony and ultimately useless) measurements that can be neatly lined up as bulleted points on Powerpoint presentations offered to university and college communities as quarterly reports. But once one gets past the word salad and the conceptual fads, there is truly no substance.

Posted in Culture, Media, Sociology | 9 Comments »



9 Responses to “Powerpoint – The Un-Sociological Software”

  1.   Philip Cohen Says:

    I’m not with you here. Powerpoint it no more necessarily linear than text itself. It is no more a straitjacket than the printed page. And it’s no more dumbed-down than the content you put in it. If we refused to use tools that were used by corporations to control their workers, we’d have to stop using computers, and pencils for that matter.

    Reply

    •   SocProf Says:

      If I were a smart aleck. I’d say “HA! The printed page IS a straijacket!” ;-)

      Levity aside, it’s not about not using corporate tools, it’s about not using them the way they are used in corporations because it is not the same context.

      I would also argue that form does determine content and that using ppt does involve reformatting content for the medium, and that necessarily transforms it.

      Reply

  2.   Sam Ladner Says:

    I think this is a great analysis. But, that said, i know you can de-hegemonize (a word??) Power Point by restricting your use of it to images and summary slides. I don’t feel straightjacketed by it any more than I feel straightjacketed by my overall outline for the presentation or lecture.

    I find academics are usually terrible at Power Point (but no more so than, say, bank employees). They overuse text and use irrelevant animations just because they’re there to be used.

    Reply

    •   SocProf Says:

      Yeah, that has been my “de-hegemonizing” strategy too, only visuals. But actually, when I teach with a lot of visuals, I prefer to have several browser windows with lots of tabs. That way, I can switch back and forth quickly between them and I am not bound by the order of the slides.

      What I hate with a passion is the idea that some of my colleagues are teaching with stupid powerpoints given to them by publishers.These ppts suck so incredibly bad. Yuck.

      Reply

  3.   JoVE Says:

    I accept that there are a LOT of bad PowerPoint presentations out there. But your explanation seems overly deterministic.

    In teaching, we used to use overhead projectors. My initial use of PowerPoint was very much as if it was the new OHP. I put the same things on slides as I put on transparencies.

    And the limitations and problems were very similar. I go with headings, outlines, etc. to help the audience stay on track with what I’m saying. But I’ve seen others put a lot of text on overhead transparencies long before PP ever existed.

    The social practice that leads to the problems you talk about is the one where the slides themselves circulate as the presentation. This leads people to try to get all the content on the slides which is doomed to turn out badly. And some employers pretty well require that (Government of Canada, anyone?).

    In many situations I think it is possible to respond to a request for “the slides” as if it is a request for the content — provide a handout, or speaking notes, or a recording. Or tell the requestor that you don’t make that available and they need to attend the event (preferably in advance).

    I now write the handout separately from the slides.

    If the content is dictated by the form, there are bigger problems to solve.

    Reply

    •   SocProf Says:

      I’m enough of a dinosaur myself to have used transparencies and overhead projectors :-)

      That being said, that’s not the same. When you use transparencies, you’re not bound by the slide orders.

      And an outline is one thing but it’s usually more than that.

      I would argue that content is always to an extent dictated by the form.

      Reply

  4.   Nathan Palmer Says:

    I really like what you wrote here. Congrats to you for taking a stand that is critique worthy.

    I would say that maybe there is a third way. A standard linear bullet point PowerPoint isn’t helpful for anyone other than the presenter. Doing away with PowerPoint is an option, but you leave a lot of potential on the table.

    Another option is that you use PowerPoint in a way that encourages learning and doesn’t reproduce hegemony. I use PowerPoint to create presentations full of images, graphically expressed data, and the like.

    I wrote all about this a couple of weeks ago on my blog http://www.SociologySource.com.

    You can read the whole post here: http://www.sociologysource.com/home/2010/10/4/death-by-bullet-point-how-to-teach-with-powerpoint.html

    Reply

  5.   Alan Sloane Says:

    Your description of what is really required: “unveiling causality and connections and interdependencies” seems uncannily close to what Prezi is aiming for (though I’m not sure it quite makes it – yet anyway.) prezi.com

    Stopping the corporatization of education is a bigger ask, sadly.

    Reply

    •   SocProf Says:

      I have gotten my greedy hands on Prezi but have not used it yet. I hope you’re right about it. When the term is over, I might have more time to play with it.

      Reply

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