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Incarceration Games Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms

Incarceration Games By Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms

Incarceration Games by Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms


$59.99
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Reexamines the complex history and troubled legacy of improvised, interactive role-playing experiments. With particular attention to the notorious Stanford prison study, the author draws on extensive archival research and original interviews with many of those involved, to refocus attention on the in-game choices of the role-players themselves.

Incarceration Games Summary

Incarceration Games: A History of Role-Play in Psychology, Prisons, and Performance by Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms

Do you want to play a game?

Incarceration Games reexamines the complex history and troubled legacy of improvised, interactive role-playing experiments. With particular attention to the notorious Stanford prison study, the author draws on extensive archival research and original interviews with many of those involved, to refocus attention on the in-game choices of the role-players themselves.

Role-playing as we understand it today was initially developed in the 1930s as a therapeutic practice within the New York state penal system. This book excavates that history and traces the subsequent adoption of these methods for lab experimentation, during the postwar stage production era in American social psychology. It then examines the subsequent mutation of the Stanford experiment, in particular, into cultural mythexploring the ways in which these distorted understandings have impacted on everything from reality TV formats to the enhanced interrogation of real-world terror suspects. Incarceration Games asks readers to reconsider what they thought they knew about this tangled history, and to look at it again from the role-players perspective.

About Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms

Stephen Scott-Bottoms is Professor of Contemporary Theatre and Performance at the University of Manchester. He is the author of Playing Underground: A Critical History of the 1960s Off-Off-Broadway Movement and coauthor of Sex, Drag, and Male Roles: Investigating Gender as Performance.

Table of Contents

Figures
Note on Sources
Preface: Wanting to See.
Part One: The Stage Production Era
  • Setting the Scene: Role-Playing and its Discontents
  • From Sing Sing to Psychodrama: J.L. Moreno and the Invention of Spontaneity
  • The Trouble with Normal: Sherif, Asch, and the Theatre of Insecurity
  • The Performance of Compliance: Prisoner Coercion and Dissonant Cognition
  • From Teacher to Torturer: Playing Obedient for Stanley Milgram
Part Two: Approaching Stanford
  • Good Cop / Bad Cop: Interrogation, Confession, and Philip Zimbardo
  • Things Fall Apart: Experimenting with Urban Crime
  • Theatre of Cruelty: Designing and Implementing the Stanford Prison Experiment
  • The Role of the Prisoner: Learned Helplessness and Earned Resilience
  • The Role of the Guard: Dark Play and Dirty Work
Part Three: Beyond the Lab
  • The Medium is the Message: Stanford Stories and the San Quentin Six
  • Lifting the Mask: The Prisoner, the Self, and Geese Theatre
  • Attack of the Clones: Ethics, Entertainment, and Re-enactment
  • Mission Drift: Role-Playing Torture in the War on Terror
  • Consenting Adults: Toward an Alternative Paradigm
Acknowledgements and List of interviewees
Bibliography

Additional information

GOR013741889
9780472056712
0472056719
Incarceration Games: A History of Role-Play in Psychology, Prisons, and Performance by Stephen J. Scott-Bottoms
Used - Very Good
Paperback
The University of Michigan Press
2024-05-31
416
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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