I am reading Plague, which is the fourth novel in the Gone series, and I am on page 108. I will also be referencing Hunger, which is the third novel in the series, one or two times. Hunger ended with Perdido Beach ablaze during a fight between the mutants and normal. Mary also attempted to commit a mass suicide with the children that she cares for because she thought that dying would take them home, but this fails due to the heroics of Dehra. During the beginning of Plague, an infectious disease infects three girls who all live in the same household, and these girls end up passing away. Then, Sam and a group of mutants are sent to investigate new sources of water for Perdido Beach as their current water supply is running dangerously low. Sam …show more content…
To begin, they live in a worry free area of the Fallout Alley Youth Zone. This is illustrated by this quote by Diana, “It was amazing what decent food could do for a starving girl,” (Grant 14). This quote shows that the island that they now live on contains enough supplies to remove the need to ration food. The kids can eat as much as they would have before the FAYZ had been synthesized. Being well fed can improve one’s looks, emotional state, and thought process. With these three noted points in a good state, people will function normally, and they will have no reason to fight because they will be able to analyze situations and avoid making rash decisions. As shown, the overabundance of food shows how much of a heaven the island in which they live on is. Also, the island is free of the darkness’s control. The darkness used to inhabit the minds of the Coates Academy members, and no matter what time or place the darkness would always linger in their minds. It would alter their personalities in such a large amount as to cause them to commit the atrocious act of murder. The darkness is a powerful entity, and the inhabitants of the FAYZ are its pawns. Being free of darkness is being free of a constant over looming depression that can change people in ways unimaginable. This is the reason as to why Coates Academy has discovered a heaven on the FAYZ. Additionally, the Coates Academy group does not need to work to survive on the island. The food is already there for them, and all they have to do is relax. After the yearlong ordeal of barely surviving, a few weeks of relaxing and being well fed will be blissful to the Coates Academy kids. All the children have to do is sit back and relax. Clearly, not needing to work to survive removes stress from the kid’s lives, which further shows how much of a paradise they inhabit. Next, the teenagers
This Primary Source is an excerpt from "The Cremation of Strasbourg Jewry, St. Valentine's Day, February 14, 1349—About the Great Plague and the Burning of the Jews" This document talks about how the Jews were blamed for the spread of the plague by putting poisons into water and wells. Because of this it was decided that all Jews would be burned to death and none would be allowed to enter specific cities for 200 years. Our primary source gives us an idea of what people thought started the plague. Many people blamed the Jews saying that they had killed christ and that they poisoned the water and the wells with the plague. The Black Plague allowed a new wave of Anti-Semitism to spread through Europe.
Ring around the rosie, a pocket full of posies, ashes, ashes, ⅓ of Europe got obliterated by the black plague. The black plague, also called the Black Death, began in East Asia then traveled to Europe . The disease was carried by rats & it caused fever, developed lesions, and death within a few days of having it. The citizens in Europe, at the time, were unaware of what the cause of the plague was, leading to many different responses. Europeans had reacted in various ways towards the black plague like using it as a means to collect money, strengthen beliefs, & causing deaths.
The plague then started to infect thousands and thousands until 35% of Europe’s population was deceased. This reduced the world population in total to seventy-five to one hundred million people. Massive loss of life was caused. For a short time war stopped and trade declined. Many of the serfs died, so the remaining ones demanded higher wages.
Insects have been biting and sucking the blood of humans and animals throughout history. Plague swept through early civilizations, killing millions of people. The Black Death was a plague pandemic that swept through Asia and Europe, killing possibly as many as 25 million people. It wasn't until the late 1800s that researchers figured out what caused this horrible disease that kept reappearing throughout history. They discovered that rats were also getting sick from the plague, and that infected people had fleabites from rats.
Thousands of years ago, a plague invaded the human world. The plague ' 'was know by the Great Pestilence, The Great plague, and the Black death ' '(Intro Doc). The plague attacked and kill around 25% and 45% of the societies it touch and/or encountered. The plague was made of three bacterial strains which created the three plagues called bubonic, pneumonic, and septimic. At this time of desesperation and agony in most homes religion such as Islam and Christianity became the most powerful force in the lives of people.
You never had to worry about running out of food or ice or even chewing gum” (12). This demonstrates how children that have little to no food like the Wells children, find the hospital to be a comforting place even more than
How to Survive a Plaque by David France and United in Anger by Jim Hubbard are both historical documentary films that talk about the history of the organization created called ACT UP. ACT UP is for the AIDS activist movement from people with all different perspectives such as people from the trenches to people having the disease and fighting it. The film was made to expand the news on the movement and to try to show the effect AIDS had on people. Interviews, footage of protests and speeches from the members of ACT UP were all recoded for these films. They were all personal and true stories that were told to help the future generations and to prevent something similar happening again.
One of the biggest summer nuisance would be the mosquito, but more specifically the Ades aegypti mosquito. The Aedes aegypti is the vector for yellow fever and the cause of the numerous deaths. In her book The American Plague: The Untold Story of Yellow Fever, The Epidemic the Shaped Our History, Molly Caldwell Crosby presents the idea that the mosquito is not just the only reason an epidemic occurred in the 18th century. This story accounts for the disease that broke out across the world and nearly destroyed almost all of North America’s population, which some believe could have been avoided by simple quarantine analysis and sanitary methods.
Judeah Auguste University of Alaska Anchorage The Doctors Plague, Sherwin B. Nuland Kraft The Doctors Plague depicts the story of the lifeline of Ignac Semmelweis, a physician in the First Division at the Allgemeine Krankenhaus hospital in Vienna and his discovery of childbed fever. Nuland opens the medical-scientific novel with a fictional story of a young nameless girl who is inching closer to her birth date. From her friend, she learns there are two obstetric divisions, one run by doctors and the other by midwives, advising the soon to be mom to stay clear of medical students. Already foreshadowing being attended by the medical students results in an uncomfortable situation, Nuland leaves the readers with curiosity and the answer to
The reactions from the Christians and the Muslims to the greatly feared disease, known as the Black Death or the Great Plague were different in several ways. The first Plague was documented from 541 to 544 CE. Known as the Plague of Justinian. The Plague came in three different ways: bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic. With bubonic being the most common.
During the mid-fourteenth century, a plague hit Europe. Initially spreading through rats and subsequently fleas, it killed at least one-third of the population of Europe and continued intermittently until the 18th century. There was no known cure at the time, and the bacteria spread very quickly and would kill an infected person within two days, which led to structural public policies, religious, and medical changes in Europe. The plague had an enormous social effect, killing much of the population and encouraging new health reforms, it also had religious effects by attracting the attention of the Catholic Church, and lastly, it affected the trade around Europe, limiting the transportation of goods. As a response to the plague that took place
The Black Plague During the Renaissance period a disease was brought to Europe that is known as the “Black Plague”. A ship came from China that brought rats infested with fleas, carrying the plague to Sicily. Many people aboard the ship were already dead from the disease and the ship was ordered to leave the harbor, but it was too late. Sicily was then overcome by the disease and it spread through the trade routes all over Europe.
There is a virus going around like the black plague, but instead of killing you it’s making you want to kill yourself? This novel is about teenagers who live in a world where instead of spreading selfies, they spread the virus of suicide. To cure this major epidemic an organization called the program is here to save the day. The program finds the only way to save these teenagers is to erase their memories. Which seems quite insane to me, but it makes the book that much more interesting.
The Truth Regarding the Unfortunate Events that Plague Society From the very beginnings of recorded history, there has been a record of tragedy that has continued as society has progressed. If we start at the beginning of time, we can see a narrative of biblical misfortune that has fallen upon societies as a whole. Some may have deserved it, but I can confidently say that a fair majority did not. For example, in the book of Numbers, the Israelites complain that all they’ve been given to eat is manna, and they’d like a better variety of food. God sends a multitude of quail, providing far more meat than they can eat, but as they gorge themselves on it they are struck by a plague.
Albert Camus’s novel The Plague is set in Oran, a French port on the Algerian coast in the 1940s. His novel can be seen as an allegory about French resistance to the Nazi’s during World War 2. Camus uses the setting and the weather to depict and convey to the reader that human suffering can stem not only from pestilence but also from other humans. The plague itself can be seen as a metaphor to illustrate a calamity that tests the mettle of humans and their endurance, solidarity, compassion and will.