diseases. The cell lines needed for such experiments must be immortal, which implies that they should show signs of indefinite growth, split into a number of batches for use by numerous scientists, and frozen for long durations of time. In 1951, medicine received a significant boost derived from the discovery of the first immortal cell, which was discovered using a sample tissue acquired from a woman suffering from cervical cancer. The immortal cells were later renamed HeLa cells, which have…
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is written by Rebecca Skloot. This book tells us about how an African-American woman whose cancer cells were used to create an immortal cell line for experiments called HeLa. Henrietta was a poor black tobacco farmer with only middle-school education. It also tells us the story behind the woman who revolutionized modern medicine. With the use of these cells scientists could study viruses, human genetics, drugs, environment stress and vitamins. HeLa has helped…
8B The song Dance With The Devil by Immortal Technique talks about a young man named William a.k.a Billy Jacobs who has a capitalistic mentality stuck in his mind. This song has a common theme of living the drug lord life with lots of money and women. The main character goes through some struggles to become the top thug, but money, drugs, gangs, and evil where in his way. Immortal technique tells the listener different outcomes a person can have by dancing…
She Enculturated to hold prejudice against individuals with mental illness. As a child, she often heard of her mother criticizing a young adult in her neighborhood who often hospitalized for his psychiatric illness, probably schizophrenia. When Erika and her mother saw him walking around, her mother strictly warned her not to get close to him. Around the same time, she was seeing a dentist in a hospital that consisted of two departments, dental and psychiatric. She already created images of…
events that result in a happy or positive outcome. The discovery of ‘Immortal Life’ in cells happened in the mid-1900s following the treatment of an African American woman named Henrietta Lacks. The cells taken from her cervix were the first of human cells to grow rapidly and reproduce many generations of cells in a culture in a laboratory. A magnificent medical miracle however has a deeper and darker side to it as explored in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. It is a…
how a child bears similarity to their parents. Through the entities that arose from her, Hesiod presents in his Theogony an example of how the generation of the Greek Pantheon is one of like from like and how that in at least one way the race of immortal gods is similar to the race of men; the children begotten in both groups carry on the qualities or identities of their parents. The “dark” and “deadly” mistress gives rise to personifications that like her, their progenitor, pertain to…
the horizons of what cell culture research could bring for the better good of the human race regardless of how much money or fame he got. Dr.Gey was never a man with a silver spoon in his mouth. “According to Rebecca Skloot author of “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” when Gey was attending the University of Pittsburgh he had to stop numerous times to work as a carpenter so he could save up enough money to continue the pursuit of his studies (Skloot). This shows the pure utter…
Is it possible to live forever? To many, the idea of being immortal is preposterous. But many have debated that the cells of Henrietta Lacks are immortal, and thus so is she. Her cells have lived long after she passed away in 1951. The historical nonfiction book The Immortal Life Of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot tells of a African-American woman named Henrietta Lacks who died from cervical cancer. Throughout her sickness her visits to the doctor can best be described as skeptical. Living in…
Poverty played a huge role in the Lacks family. Due to poverty, the majority of the Lacks family was uneducated, so for many years, the family was unable to take justice upon the people who decided to take Henrietta's cells without permission and turning it into a profitable business; since they knew very little about what was actually going on and what the HeLa cells meant for the rest of the world. Further expanding on the idea that since Henrietta's family was not educated enough due to…
patients react to the care received is sometime a great concern. Nowadays it is harder to perceive any type of care for patients with mental health issues, comparing to a few decades ago, where good medical care for any minority was hard to come by. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot follows the life of Henrietta Lacks and her lack of medical care that caused her death, and how the medical world used her cells for success. On the other hand, It’s Kind of a Funny Story by Ned…