Stone Soup Experiment

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A01=Deborah Downing Wilson
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Author_Deborah Downing Wilson
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Category1=Non-Fiction
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collaboration
communication
community
competition
COP=United States
cultural difference
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emotions
endogamy
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eq_society-politics
exogamy
group identity
hierarchy
ideology
intergroup interaction
irreconcilable
Language_English
manipulation
markets
methodology
misunderstanding
nonfiction
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play
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psychology
research
separation
simulation
social experimentation
society
softlaunch
superiority

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226289809
  • Weight: 284g
  • Dimensions: 16 x 23mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2015
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The Stone Soup Experiment is a remarkable story of cultural difference, of in-groups, out-groups, and how quickly and strongly the lines between them are drawn. It is also a story about simulation and reality, and how quickly the lines between them can be dismantled. In a compulsively readable account, Deborah Downing Wilson details a ten-week project in which forty university students were split into two different simulated cultures: the carefree Stoners, and the market-driven Traders. Through their eyes we are granted intimate access to the very foundations of human society: how group identities are formed and what happens when opposing ones come into contact. The experience of the Stoners and Traders is a profound testament to human sociality. Even in the form of simulation, even as a game, the participants found themselves quickly-and with real conviction-bound to the ideologies and practices of their in-group. The Stoners enjoyed their days lounging, chatting, and making crafts, while the Traders-through a complex market of playing cards-competed for the highest bankrolls. When they came into contact, misunderstanding, competition, and even manipulation prevailed, to the point that each group became so convinced of its own superiority that even after the simulation's end the students could not reconcile. Throughout her riveting narrative, Downing Wilson interweaves fascinating discussions on the importance of play, emotions, and intergroup interaction in the formation and maintenance of group identities, as well as on the dynamic social processes at work when different cultural groups interact. A fascinating account of social experimentation, the book paints a vivid portrait of our deepest social tendencies and the powers they have over how we make friends and enemies alike.
Deborah Downing Wilson is an instructor in the department of communication at the University of Nevada, Reno.