Stanford Prison Study Philip Zimbardo

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During the fall of 1973, Phillip Zimbardo conducted his famous Stanford Prison Study where he recruited 24 undergraduate students to either become prisoners or guards in his experimental prison. The recreation of this "Stanford County Jail" was conducted to study how an individual’s roles and labels changed depending on the social role they had to fulfill. The participants included 12 guards and 12 prisoners, each given the proper uniform to wear, such as providing the prisoners with a smock that contains ID number on both sides and a chain with a heavy ball around their feet. Both groups were also given detailed instructions on the requirements they had to complete in order for the individual to assimilate to their character. In less than …show more content…

Specifically, deindividualization is seen throughout the experiment since with time, the different prisoners presented themselves not by their name, but instead by their prisoner number, such as when meeting the Catholic priest. This shows how the prisoners had unintentionally forgotten their original values and beliefs in order to comply with the norms of the group. Additionally, deindividualization allowed the prisoner to easily conform and eventually accept their role from the beginning of the study. For example, the prisoners complied with the uneasy demands of the officers, such as being searched, stripped, and sprayed to repel germs in front of the other participants even though it caused them humiliation and discomfort. As time went by, the prisoners were able to accept their inferior position and almost unconsciously comply with the officers abusive demands such as cleaning the toilet with their hands or doing extreme physical work. The prisoners quickly learned that no matter how hard they tried to escape the situation, not only did they fail, but were punished by the guards through more humiliation and work. In other words, numerous prisoners showed qualities of learned helplessness as they quickly submitted themselves to their officer’s demands knowing that this was the only way out without risking losing common human necessities seen as “privileges”, such as eating a meal, or having to perform physical punishments. This feeling of helplessness can also be highlighted with Prisoner #8612 as he stated during his experience in the prison they were told they could not quit or leave causing him to feel like a real prisoner who was isolated and restricted to perform any action. The surroundings of the prison, such as having no clocks or windows to keep a record of

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