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Discourse, Defiance, and Rationality: “Knowledge Work” in the “Obedience” Experiments
Author(s) -
Gibson Stephen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of social issues
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.618
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1540-4560
pISSN - 0022-4537
DOI - 10.1111/josi.12069
Subject(s) - milgram experiment , obedience , rhetorical question , tact , rationality , social psychology , psychology , epistemology , resistance (ecology) , relation (database) , persuasion , perspective (graphical) , compliance (psychology) , sociology , developmental psychology , linguistics , computer science , philosophy , ecology , database , artificial intelligence , biology
In this article, I present a secondary qualitative analysis of archived audio data from two conditions (“voice‐feedback” and “women as subjects”) in Milgram's experiments. Using a perspective informed by rhetorical and discursive psychologies, I focus on the rhetorical strategies employed by participants. This highlights the use of strategies based around direct invocations of “knowledge.” Analysis explores the ways in which participants could use such strategies to challenge the experimenter's definition of the situation in their efforts to extricate themselves from the experiment. Findings are discussed in relation to two ongoing debates in the study of Milgram's experiments: First, the importance of attending to defiance and resistance as much as compliance and obedience; second, the questioning of the status of the phenomena captured in Milgram's studies as necessarily being concerned with “(dis)obedience.”