Inhumanity In Elie Wiesel's Night

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11 million people were killed during the holocaust, prison camps, prisoners were forced to do hard physical labor. Torture and death within concentration camps were common and frequent. In the documentary The Stanford Prison Experiment twenty-four male students out of seventy-five were selected to take on randomly assigned roles of prisoners and guards in a mock prison as an example of unexpected effects that can occur when phycological experiments into human nature are shown. The novel "Night" demonstrates as well how powerful a few people can be by Elie's experience of the Jews in the camps and the soldiers showed nothing resembling consideration for any of the people in the camps. Both the documentary and the novel convey the notion of mans inhumanity against man by the roles of each person and how unfairly of the groups can treat someone. …show more content…

The psychology experiment has a tremendous similarity with the events on the book "Night", based in real life. Professor Zimbardo noticed that not much action was going on and believed it would be boring but one of the guards wore sunglasses to cover his eyes he also wore the uniform as a symbol of power. He started to use verbal violence without physical violence. Elie had described in his book "Night" that One of his experiences was in the cattle cars. "Mrs. Schächter had lost her mind. On the first day of the journey, she had already begun to moan". Page 24 Mrs. Schächter was not an experiment her scene was based on real life event. Thus showing others that your role/ job can lead you to not being you who you really

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