Solitary Prison Essay

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Solitary confinement is a method of punishment which isolates the prisoner from any human interaction. Its purpose is to deter the prisoner from acting out. Giving oneself time to think and correct their actions. However, this cruel and inequitable sanction does more harm than good towards the prisoner, if any. When a prisoner is placed in solitary confinement they are challenged physically and mentally. They are caged in 24 hours a day with only limited interaction from the prison guards. The prisoner is left alone, detached from the world. This can cause a negative effect on the prisoner's mental state. The prison writings of Charles Dickens “Philadelphia and its Solitary Prison, from American Notes” and Kate Richards O’Hare “Crime and Criminals” …show more content…

He states, that the intent behind this discipline is to help rehabilitate the prisoners, but he is convinced it does not do so. Dickens acknowledges that “there is a depth of terrible endurance in it which none but the sufferers themselves can fathom, and which no man has a right to inflict upon his fellow-creature” (2). No human should withstand this type of suffrage, it is simply cruel and unjust. With his conscious mind, he cannot agree that any human being deserves to “lay suffering this unknown punishment in his silent cell” (Dickens …show more content…

She states how another inmate was put into solitary confinement because they could not make the tasks. O’Hare expressed how the inmate “received no food except two very small pieces of bread and half a teacup of water” (80). She was left only that amount of food to satisfy her appetite from Saturday morning until Monday noon. The prisoner faced starvation all in the name of punishment. Despite the weather conditions, they female prisoners had no choice but to “stand continually, or lie upon the stone floor” (O’Hare 80). This punishment is torture towards any human being. Being isolated under these conditions is not good for the physical ability of the prisoner. O’Hare recalls an inmate by the name of Minnie Eddy, who was in solitary confinement for twenty-one days. She was found in a near death state “with pneumonia, fed on coarse prison food” (O’Hare 81). Minnie Eddy died the next

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