-Imprisonment can refer to places where criminals are imprisoned or confined, such as prisons and prison cells, and can also refer to people who are imprisoned in a certain environment or state, such as "illness is the imprisonment of his life".
-Imprisonment can also refer to a difficult, bound and unavoidable situation. For example, "some social and political systems have put human beings in an inescapable prison".
-In poetry, prisons are often used to express feelings of homesickness or parting, such as "Looking at the Heron Tower" by Wang Zhihuan, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, "The mountains cover the daytime, and the sea discharges the golden river, aiming at a thousand miles, climbing high and looking far". What you express is yearning for your hometown and sighing about your imprisoned life.
Here are some examples of Medoc's use of "prison":
In The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, one of the Four Signatures, Sherlock Holmes found a victim imprisoned in a prison-like basement while investigating a murder case.
-In The American Trap, the author Medoc described the unfairness and racial discrimination in American society, and thought that the life of blacks and ethnic minorities in this situation was like being trapped in a prison.
-Medoc described the life of a depressed young couple in the book Mimosa. They could not escape the pressure and difficulties brought by their families and were trapped in a prison.