Sunday, March 4, 2012

Author's Argument #2 (Stiff: The Curious Life of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach)



Précis 


In chapter’s five through eight of Mary Roach’s non-fiction work Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (2003), Roach explores more of the various little-known contributions of human cadavers. In chapter five of the book, she discusses what should be done with the bodies of individuals who were killed in in-air collisions.  She follows this chapter up with another war related topic, the use of human corpses in weapons research.  In the seventh chapter the author discusses the how cadavers were used to investigate the Shroud of Turin, a linen cloth with the image of a man who appears to have suffered physical trauma.  In the eight, and final chapter of the chunk, Roach takes a more reflective approach than she has in the previous chapters.  With the many contributions that she has recently learned of she reconsiders what it is to be dead and explores the idea of a live burial. Roach’s exploration of the contributions of human corpses and her reflection on their contributions is significant because it makes many people able to better appreciate the things that we have today as many of the contributions and practices would not have been made possible without the help of the cadavers.


Vocabulary


Propagate- to cause (an organism) to multiply by any process of natural 
   reproduction from the parent stock.
Fuselage- the complete central structure to which the wing, tail surfaces, and 
   engines are attached on an airplane.
Ostensibly- outwardly appearing as such
Promulgate- to make known by open declaration
Stoical- enduring pain and hardship without showing one's feelings or complaining


Tone


Comic
Light
Informative


Rhetorical Strategies


•  Dashes Within a Sentence- “What—or who—had brought Flight 800 down from the sky” 
    (page 114)?
•  Personification- “Leader lines spoke away from the dots on their labels: ‘brown leather 
    shoes,’‘coilpot,’ ‘piece of spine,’ ‘stewardess’” (page 115).
•  Enumeration- “Leader lines spoke away from the dots on their labels: ‘brown leather 
    shoes,’ ‘coilpot,’‘piece of spine,’ ‘stewardess’” (page 115).
•  Simile- “To make a long story short, the catapulted guinea pigs’ lungs looked a lot like 
    the Comet     
    passengers’ lungs” (Page 123).
•  Rhetorical Question- “Who decides when it’s okay to sacrifice human lives to save 
    money” (page 125)?


Discussion Questions


1.  On page 119, when Roach states the broke ribs are minor is she saying that all broken   
     ribs are minor or that in this case the broken ribs are minor?
2.  Why is it that Roach uses Chapter 8 as a somewhat reflective chapter when there are so 
     many other chapters left in the book? 
3.  Will the rest of the Chapters deal with the contributions of human cadavers as most of 
     those preceding chapter 8 have?


Important Quotation


“There is a photograph of Zugibe and one of his volunteers in the aforementioned Sindon article.  Zugibe is dressed in a knee-length white lab coat and is shown adjusting one of the vital sign leads affixed to the man's chest.  The cross reaches almost to the ceiling, towering over Zugibe and his bank of medical monitors.  The volunteer is naked except for a pair of gym shorts and a hearty mustache.  He wears the unconcerned, mildly zoned-out expression of a person waiting at a bus stop.  Neither man appears to have been self-conscious about being photographed this way.  I think that when you get yourself down deep into a project like this, you lose sight of how odd you must appear to the rest of the world” (page 163).

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