The SPE: Ethics and Extensions
2 5 5
great originality that offers itself as a fable of national (possibly universal) in-
clination toward authoritarian fascism."
4 4
Harsher was the reviewer of The
Guardian: "Any episode of Big Brother would have had more insight than this silly
and obtuse nonsense."
4 5
An American film critic, Roger Ebert, extracted one
valuable lesson from the movie, which applies to the SPE as well: "Perhaps uni-
forms turn us into packs, led by the top dog. There are few strays."
4 6
A Polish artist, Artur Zmijewski, has made a forty-six-minute film, Repetition,
that highlights the seven days paid volunteers spent in his mock prison. The film
was screened every hour on the hour to large audiences in the Polish Pavilion at
the June 2 0 0 5 Venice Biennale, the world's oldest celebration of contemporary
art, and also shown in Warsaw and San Francisco art venues.
According to one reviewer, this film "suggests that Zimbardo's experiment,
which has as much intuition as strictly scientific method in its design, may have
had the makings of a work of art. . . . In the simulated prison, however, artistic
decorum soon gets left behind. The 'game' achieves a momentum of its own, so
completely wrapping up its players in its dynamic that it starts to touch them at
the core. Guards get more brutal and controlling. The disobedient are put in soli-
tary: all heads are shaved. At this point a few prisoners, rather than simply seeing
all this as annoying play that they can bear with for as long as it takes (at $ 4 0 a
day), see it as a genuinely evil situation and quit the 'experiment' for good."
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T H E S T A N F O R D P R I S O N E X P E R I M E N T
W E B S I T E : I N T E R N E T P O W E R
Using archival footage and a forty-two-page slide show,
www.prisonexp.org
tells
the story of what happened during our experiment's six fateful days: it includes
background documents, discussion questions, articles, interviews, and a wealth
of other material for teachers, students, and anyone else interested in learning
more about the experiment and corrections, in five languages. It was launched in
December 1 9 9 9 , with the expert assistance of Scott Pious and Mike Lestik.
If you visit
Google.com
and do a keyword search for "Experiment." what you
are likely to discover is that the SPE is the top-ranked website worldwide, out of
2 9 1 million results, as of August 2 0 0 6 . Similarly, an August 2 0 0 6 Google key-
word search for "Prison" places the Stanford Prison Experiment website second
only to the Federal Bureau of Prisons of the United States, out of more than 1 9 2
million results.
On a typical day,
www.prisonexp.org's
pages are viewed more than 2 5 , 0 0 0
times, more than 38 million times since the site was launched. At the height of
news coverage on the Abu Ghraib Prison abuses in May and June 2 0 0 4 , Web traf-
fic to the Stanford Prison Experiment website (and its parent site,
www.social
psychology.org
) exceeded 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 page views per day. This level of traffic attests
not only to public interest in psychological research but to the need many people
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