Literature DB >> 21322973

From Milgram to Zimbardo: the double birth of postwar psychology/psychologization.

Jan De Vos1.   

Abstract

Milgram's series of obedience experiments and Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment are probably the two best-known psychological studies. As such, they can be understood as central to the broad process of psychologization in the postwar era. This article will consider the extent to which this process of psychologization can be understood as a simple overflow from the discipline of psychology to wider society or whether, in fact, this process is actually inextricably connected to the science of psychology as such. In so doing, the article will argue that Milgram's and Zimbardo's studies are best usefully understood as twin experiments. Milgram's paradigm of a psychology which explicitly draws its subject into the frame of its own discourse can be said to be the precondition of Zimbardo's claim that his experiment offers a window onto the crucible of human behaviour. This will be analysed by drawing on the Lacanian concepts of acting out and passage à l'acte. The question then posed is: if both Milgram and Zimbardo claim that their work has emancipatory dimensions - a claim maintained within mainstream psychology - does a close reading of the studies not then reveal that psychology is, rather, the royal road to occurrences such as Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib? The drama of a psychology which is fundamentally based on a process of psychologization is that it turns its subjects into homo sacer of psychological discourse.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21322973     DOI: 10.1177/0952695110384774

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Human Sci        ISSN: 0952-6951            Impact factor:   0.690


  2 in total

1.  Psychiatrization in mental health care: The emergency department.

Authors:  Timo Beeker
Journal:  Front Sociol       Date:  2022-09-23

Review 2.  Psychiatrization of Society: A Conceptual Framework and Call for Transdisciplinary Research.

Authors:  Timo Beeker; China Mills; Dinesh Bhugra; Sanne Te Meerman; Samuel Thoma; Martin Heinze; Sebastian von Peter
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2021-06-04       Impact factor: 4.157

  2 in total

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