The story of Ewald begins with his concerns on why some diseases are contagious while others ignore, leading to his visitation at the school of hygiene. He needed to understand the relationship existing between an host and parasites cause in his mind there shouldn’t be any kind of connection. His argument was based on the drastical effect it causes due to the fact that it immobilizes its patient, and if not taking care of will leads to a rapid spread making the surrounding contagious comparing viruses that have a human host not been succeeding in transmitting diseases from host to another host than insect like mosquitoes which transport the virus malaria through biting since it immobilized the human contract, leading to a drastic break down and his reason has to do with the rapid transmission and effects of malaria, and yellow fever was still transported actively by this insect through bites than cold. This led to his understanding of the massive deadly that had occurred in the previous year because the bacteria cause diarrhea isn’t culpable enough as mosquitoes in being productive with the transmission process. …show more content…
Through the reading of the Darwin book, sought the reason the southern side suffer than the middle class, reason being was their water supply was dirty discover by Snow when he look through the mean line of their water causing the severe harm to those dwelling in it as Ewald concludes that if the lethality of cholera causing diarrhea, typhoid fever and other severe illness before resulting to death, as he went on to described basing upon the idea gathered as way of improving the public health. If this waterborne disease causes something harmful, purify it would the opposite, he suggests being that this disease was transmitted by the water
Unspoken is a book written by Luke Allnutt. The book is based around the story of his dad dying of a terminal illness, brain cancer. The tumor Luke’s dad developed was traced back to an immense amount of radiation he experienced when he was a child. The original round of radiation was helping cure the cancer that caused him to lose his sight, the very thing that cured him as a child will kill him later in his life. Upon the realization that the events you read about or watch an television was happening in Luke’s life affected him greatly.
Paul Bäumer is introduced as the main character in the novel, and the novel is told in his experience and his perspective. He starts the story off by explaining what happens during a daily life of a soldier at a war. He goes on to explains the amount of what they eat and a number of smoking supplies that they can have. He explains that the war that they are currently in, their supplies are rationed. He then explains that 14 days ago they had to go to the front line and to go to battle.
Near the end of Mary Downing Hahn’s December Stillness, a novel about a teenage girl named Kelly who tries to get to know and understand a homeless Vietnam veteran named Mr. Weems, there is a tragic event. Mr. Weems is killed in what seems like a tragic accident. However, even though his death was tragic, it was not an accident. He, like many other war veterans, was severely haunted by the acts which he and others had committed in Vietnam. Due to the trauma of the war and losses he suffers in the course of the book, it is clear that Mr. Weems’ death was not an accident.
In my article, Zika virus, it states, “The Zika virus ‘is now spreading explosively’ in the Americas, estimating between 3 million to 4 million infections in the region over 12-month period.” (Botelho 1). From the article we can tell the Zika virus spread explosively because of infections. One way this book is similar to my article is that, both texts show contagiousness by explaining, infections. Both of these texts also show that little causes have big
Joy Kogawa's Obasan is a representation of the silence Japanese Canadians experience specifically in the past as they have been repressed from telling the stories of the internment camps in Canada due to the government's pressure to not talk about what happened to them, leading to the negative and generational consequences of silence as a trauma response. In addition to showing how Japanese Canadians have covered up traumatic events through silence. Obasan also demonstrates how silence has not solved anything, but has made the traumatic events worse, and that healing can only occur when people begin to speak about them. Silence is shown by the family secret about Namois's mother being absent, as well as Namoi never wanting to tell anyone about her sexual assault from an Old Man Grower, the difference between Namoi’s aunts in how they choose to be vocal or silent in their life. Finally, how Joy Kogawa herself uses Obasan as a way to use language to share her story as a Japanese Canadian.
How The Chosen focuses on silence By Beni Halmos In 1967, the American Jewish writer and Rabbi Chaim Potok released his book, named The Chosen. It is a book set over a course of 6 years in Brooklyn in the 1940’s, and is about two Jewish boys with different cultural background and their friendship. The two boys, Reuven and Danny, only get to know each other because of an accident during baseball, despite living 5 blocks from each other for the past 15 years of their lives. Throughout the book, the two get a taste of each other’s culture, and their friendship gets tested multiple times due to the tension rising as their culture collides with each other.
Valley Forge It is really cold, and there is no supplies. The date is December 18,1777 we are at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania and the situation is horrible, we have no meat, no clothes, and no medicine, also lots of people are dying because of smallpox and other diseases. Many people are talking about if they are going to re-enlist or not, so the question for everyone is would you re-enlist or not? I have decided to not re-enlist for three reasons which are there is lots of disease, I don 't want to die, and my family needs me. I know it might seem selfish but, I have a lot to live for.
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.
Holocaust, it was unforgettable and the most famous history in 1933-1945. There were 11 million people were killed by different ways. But, no one help them to say anythings, just keep silent.... Night, a book that is about the boy who is 15 years old to overcome the challenges unceasingly and still survives under the Holocaust. Eile Wiesel is a very lucky survivor, but something couldn 't reverse for him.
Chloe Guillaume Ms. McArdle Period 4, Language Arts 18 March 2023 Character analysis in The Silent Patient Silence bares the loudest screams. Alicia Berenson since she shot her husband, Gabriel Berenson, in the face 5 times. The Silent Patient By Alex Michaelides follows Theo Faber, a criminal psychologist as he attempts to uncover Alicia's silent mystery. He loses his mind in the process, but ultimately uncovers how your impact on someone's life can make deeper wounds than a bullet. Theo Faber changes exponentially as a person, due to his wife's infidelity, his incapability to process his emotions, and even though one may say Theos reaction to his predicament was rational, that is simply not true because his reaction killed Gabriel.
In Night, one is faced with silence and negligence from the world. While being unwillingly evacuated from his home, Eliezer’s friends and neighbours stayed inside and watched as their former companions marched to their impending death. As Eliezer noted, “from behind their windows, from behind their shutters, our fellow citizens watched as we passed.’ (Eliezer Wiesel, 19) The Hungarian civilians watched in silence too naive and confused to approach the German military and help the Jewish people.
How has the Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic of 1793 change history? An appalling contagious outbreak impacted the colossal city of America and its country’s capital. In the summer of 1793 the weather was brutally humid and mild. Therefore, this infectious disease has initiated in August and is known to be terminated approximately few months later in November. This disease has commenced by mosquitoes and caused a massive amount of deaths.
Certain fears prevent others from causing a certain action in life, avoiding to be next to something or someone, or fear can get to a point to make someone remain silent. Meanwhile, silence is something that many people don’t consider that important. Maybe silence may not be a big deal. But in reality, silence is something that can mean a lot and can affect others in many ways over time. During the Holocaust, many of the Jews have noticed that they have changed over time.
Bonnie Tucker and Matt Hamill; How are They the Same and How are They Different In the book, The Feel of Silence by Bonnie Tucker, you see the story of a young woman growing up deaf. Although medically and physically she is profoundly deaf, in the mind and heart she desperately wants to be a part of the hearing world. Even in her older years she never really accepted her deafness totally. On one hand you have the Deaf people in the world who are like Bonnie, but on the other you see people like the hammer, formally known as Matt Hamill.
A silent voice by Yoshitoki Ōima, The book starts off with a new girl who went to a new school but when she was introducing herself to the class she wrote down on a notebook saying that she is deaf and hopes to get to know everyone and if people want to talk to her just write on her notebook. The teacher was telling people to read some sentence on the book he tells this one girl to speak up and then when he called on the deaf girl she tried to speak and the teacher called on someone else and it was a boy who hated her he made fun of how she was talking. There was some reason that the boy hated her reason 1 was that she gave him the creeps and reason 2 was that she dragged everyone else down with here her the third reason was that they all got tired of dealing with her. In choir she tried to sing but everyone could not sing well