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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Reactions to catastrophic events vary to a significant degree depending upon the cultural and social implications. The extent to which the aspects of public and private tragedy serve to further deepen the divide is both grand and far-reaching; that each form of catastrophe brings about responses of anger, perceived betrayal and outright erroneousness speaks to human nature's prerequisite to find answers to questions that do not always exist. This realization is duly illustrated in Fadiman's The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down and Kelly's The Great Mortality whereby each other depicts the aftermath of tragedy that marks a watershed moment in the lives of those who endure the catastrophe. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCCatastr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the aspects of public and private tragedy serve to further deepen the divide is both grand and far-reaching; that each form of catastrophe brings about responses of anger, perceived betrayal
and outright erroneousness speaks to human natures prerequisite to find answers to questions that do not always exist. This realization is duly illustrated in Fadimans The Spirit Catches You
and You Fall Down and Kellys The Great Mortality whereby each other depicts the aftermath of tragedy that marks a watershed moment in the lives of those who endure the
catastrophe. Reactions to critical incidents such as tragedies, deaths, serious injuries, hostage and/or threatening situations require the human being to respond in a way that intensifies the inherent manifestations of
denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance; however, the examples brought forth by Fadiman (1998) and Kelly (2006) do not follow these standards of grief but instead display a much more
wide-ranging response that incorporates the various ways in which some people go to the extreme by exhibiting uncharacteristic behavior while others seek out otherwise unrelated entities upon which to place
blame for the catastrophe. No matter the response, however, one common denominator between each authors depiction is the way these reactions - no matter how harsh - are based
within the foundation being forced to cope with unmitigated stress, fear and anger. Another similarity between both accounts is how the element of blame figures prominently within the quest to
purge the pain felt by such tremendous grief. For the Hmong, a vast cultural divide proved to be the primary reason why Lia Lee died needlessly in the midst
of confusion, anger and contempt for Western medicine. The familys response to Lia becoming brain dead while the American health care system and the Lees cultural defiance developed into
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