This paper contests what has remained a core assumption in social psychological and general understandings of the Milgram experiments. Analysing the learner/victim’s rhetoric in experimental sessions across five conditions (N= 170), it demonstrates that what participants were exposed to was not the black-and-white scenario of being pushed towards continuation by the experimental authority and pulled towards discontinuation by the learner/victim. Instead, the traditionally posited explicit collision of “forces” or “identities” was at all points of the experiments undermined by an implicit collusion between them: rendering the learner/victim a divided and contradictory subject, and the experimental process a constantly shifting and paradoxic...
The study critically examines contemporary academic engagement with Stanley Milgram's classic ‘obedi...
Hollander and Turowetz (2017) present important data from post-experimental interviews with particip...
Recent research has begun to challenge the received idea that Milgram’s ‘obedience’ experiments are ...
The paper seeks to re‐conceptualize Stanley Milgram's (in)famous experiments on willing obedience by...
Traditionally, Milgram's 'obedience' studies have been used to propose that 'ordinary people' are ca...
The present paper uses previously unpublished data from Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiments in o...
Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiment is one of the most famous experiments in the history of psyc...
In this paper I present a secondary qualitative analysis of archived audio data from two conditions ...
Fifty years after the experiments of Stanley Milgram, the main objective of the present paper is to ...
We have run a series of studies that include two (ethical) paradigms of Milgram's obedience studies....
In Milgram’s seminal obedience studies, participants’ behaviour has traditionally been explained as ...
Stanley Milgram's obedience experiments are among the most influential and controversial scientific ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
In Milgram's seminal obedience studies, participants' behaviour has traditionally been explained as ...
In May 1962, social psychologist, Stanley Milgram, ran what was arguably the most controversial vari...
The study critically examines contemporary academic engagement with Stanley Milgram's classic ‘obedi...
Hollander and Turowetz (2017) present important data from post-experimental interviews with particip...
Recent research has begun to challenge the received idea that Milgram’s ‘obedience’ experiments are ...
The paper seeks to re‐conceptualize Stanley Milgram's (in)famous experiments on willing obedience by...
Traditionally, Milgram's 'obedience' studies have been used to propose that 'ordinary people' are ca...
The present paper uses previously unpublished data from Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiments in o...
Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiment is one of the most famous experiments in the history of psyc...
In this paper I present a secondary qualitative analysis of archived audio data from two conditions ...
Fifty years after the experiments of Stanley Milgram, the main objective of the present paper is to ...
We have run a series of studies that include two (ethical) paradigms of Milgram's obedience studies....
In Milgram’s seminal obedience studies, participants’ behaviour has traditionally been explained as ...
Stanley Milgram's obedience experiments are among the most influential and controversial scientific ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
In Milgram's seminal obedience studies, participants' behaviour has traditionally been explained as ...
In May 1962, social psychologist, Stanley Milgram, ran what was arguably the most controversial vari...
The study critically examines contemporary academic engagement with Stanley Milgram's classic ‘obedi...
Hollander and Turowetz (2017) present important data from post-experimental interviews with particip...
Recent research has begun to challenge the received idea that Milgram’s ‘obedience’ experiments are ...