The Nazi Party took the lives of over six million Jewish people along with millions of other victims under the leadership of Adolf Hitler. Victims during this time such as inmates of concentration camps were subject to countless types of torture, such as humiliation, beatings, rape, exhausting forced labor, and much more. Nazism is the political ideology that is placed on the very far right of the political spectrum, and is also generally referred to as an example of totalitarian government. George Orwell’s controversial novel, 1984, introduces readers to the dangers of totalitarianism and how life could have looked if society took the route of following the natures of Nazi Germany. Orwell demonstrates how this system of government would alter …show more content…
The Party overwhelms the minds of the people with certain psychological tactics that are designed to not allow for independent thoughts. The Party is all knowing of its citizens; they monitor the behavior of every person via telescreens that are located in every room, watching every single move that is made. These telescreens also instill propaganda into the citizens minds, constantly giving the reminder of the Party’s successes along with the fact that Big Brother is always watching. People like Winston always had to be conscious of their movements because “It was terribly dangerous to let your thoughts wander when you were in any public place or within range of a telescreen. The smallest thing could give you away. A nervous tic, an unconscious look of anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself -- anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality, of having something to hide” (Orwell 54). It is to the point where a person’s nervous system could be the one thing that betrays them, because the slightest twitch showing any type of irregularity or rebellion can ultimately lead to arrest. The Party’s utmost goal is to not only have total control over society, but to also regain …show more content…
Several doctors of medicine, philosophy, and behavioral sciences at universities and hospitals of Israel put together an article analyzing the association between chronic physical pain, and how it affects the mindfulness and overall psychology of people. They elaborate on the matter of when people have chronic pain, mindfulness tends to have an effect on their levels of physical and emotional distress. Pain catastrophizing is one of the main topics highlighted in the