pestilence
Plague is the representative work of Camus, a French existentialist writer, and is regarded as a work with far-reaching influence and social significance. The novel tells the story of the residents of Oran city, represented by Dr. Rieu, who are United as one enemy and bravely resist in the face of sudden plague and death threat. The book vividly shows the vivid daily life in a small town with rich details, and also clearly depicts the struggle and struggle of ordinary people when the plague broke out, showing people's struggle attitude and pursuit of truth and justice in trouble.
Lord of the Flies
Lord of the flies is Golding's most important masterpiece and a famous philosophical novel, which explores the serious theme of evil human nature through children's innocence. The story took place in the fictional World War III. A group of children aged 6 to 12 were trapped on a desert island due to a plane crash on their way home. At first, they could live in harmony, but later, due to the expansion of evil nature, they killed each other and had tragic results.
Blind roaming
A passerby sent him home, but he contracted a strange disease of blindness. The ophthalmologist became the third victim. The white plague made people in the city panic, and the blind were forced to be isolated in an abandoned mental hospital. However, blindness still spreads uncontrollably.
Plague era
The novel describes the city of London under the great plague of 1665. This novel is probably based on the records left by Defoe's uncle Henry Defoe. In this book, Defoe spared no effort to describe specific communities, streets, and even houses with plagues in order to achieve realistic results. In addition, it provides a casualty list and discusses the reliability of various records and anecdotes.
the lucifer effect: understanding how good people turn evil
197 1 year, philip zimbardo, an American social psychologist, presided over the Stanford prison experiment, which triggered the global psychologists to re-examine the naive view of human nature in the past. In the experiment, the recruits were selected through special tests, that is, college students with physical and mental health and emotional stability. These people were randomly divided into two groups: jailers and prisoners, and then placed in a simulated prison environment.
At the beginning of the experiment, the subjects strongly felt the influence of role norms and tried to play the established role. On the sixth day, the situation became too realistic. What used to be a simple college student has become a cruel jailer and a prisoner with a nervous breakdown. A uniform identity can easily change a person's temperament, and the experiment scheduled for two weeks had to be terminated.