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A conceptual extension of Foucault’s Panopticon, where the surveillance and discipline come not from a single tower but from the entire social environment—neighbors, peers, institutions, media, and cultural expectations. Everyone is both observer and observed, constantly monitoring and being monitored for conformity to social norms. The Society Panopticon explains why people police their own behavior even when no authority is present: the fear of social judgment, gossip, exclusion, or reputational damage has been internalized. Unlike a prison, the cell doors are open—but leaving means stepping into a world where every glance is a potential judge.
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