On March 11, 1985, a van was pulled over in Warsaw for a routine
traffic check that turned out to be anything but routine. Inside
was Marek Kaminski, a Warsaw University student who also ran an
underground press for Solidarity. The police discovered illegal
books in the vehicle, and in a matter of hours five secret police
escorted Kaminski to jail. A sociology and mathematics major one
day, Kaminski was the next a political prisoner trying to adjust to
a bizarre and dangerous new world. This remarkable book represents
his attempts to understand that world.
As a coping strategy until he won his freedom half a year later
by faking serious illness, Kaminski took clandestine notes on
prison subculture. Much later, he discovered the key to unlocking
that culture--game theory. Prison first appeared an irrational
world of unpredictable violence and arbitrary codes of conduct. But
as Kaminski shows in riveting detail, prisoners, to survive and
prosper, have to master strategic decision-making. A clever move
can shorten a sentence; a bad decision can lead to rape, beating,
or social isolation. Much of the confusion in interpreting prison
behavior, he argues, arises from a failure to understand that
inmates are driven not by pathological emotion but by predictable
and rational calculations.
Kaminski presents unsparing accounts of initiation rituals,
secret codes, caste structures, prison sex, self-injuries, and of
the humor that makes this brutal world more bearable. This is a
work of unusual power, originality, and eloquence, with
implications for understanding human behavior far beyond the walls
of one Polish prison.
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