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Anne Notated Bibliography is fundamentally differently from you and me. See, she has many different sources that made her, and explanations for how they contribute to her personality, unlike how I have only guesses to why I do stuff and why i want to do stuff, and how that idea even got in my head. Here, we see what Anne looks like, with perhaps a few formatting issues, and by no means in her entirety.
Adam Steinichen
Mr. Grimm
English
9/26/17
Annotated Bibliography
Al-Rubeyi, BI. “Mortality Before and After the Invasion of Iraq in 2003.” Lancet, vol. 364 North American Edition, no. 9448, 20 Nov. 2004, pp. 1834-1835.
This is an article on the deaths in Iraq, especially civilian casualties caused by allied forces. There is a conflict between two numbers, one close to one hundred thousand, and the other closer to ten thousand. The ten thousand number is based of deaths captured by the media, so the author argues the nearly one hundred thousand number is much closer as many incidents go unreported. This article also touches on political responsibility for those deaths, and has a quote from Lt Col Richard Long about censoring the media about civilian death, “Frankly our job is to win the war. Part of that is information warfare. So we are going to attempt to dominate the information environment”
I want a better article for the war section, but this is the best I could find right now. It mentions political responsibility for death, which is kind of what I want to get at.
Garces-Foley, Kathleen. “Hospice and the Politics of Spirituality.” Omega: Journal of Death & Dying, vol. 53, no. 1/2, May 2006, pp. 117-136. EBSCOhost, doi:10.2190/53LR-WBR4-G89T-EWBN.
This is a critique of how hospice care is conducted in terms of its management of a facility that has many varied religious beliefs and degrees of that belief. The author concludes that because of many hospices promoting one certain spirituality, there ends up with many patients irritated or estranged in their beliefs, and the even more religious ones without the resources to practice as they would like.
This article is useful especially for this quote, “spirituality, like religion, is a culturally constructed category promoted by particular people with particular goals” which is from the author, in a study. I will use this quote for one of my opening lines on the topic of how religions use death and how death affects people’s religion. Also, it can be referenced in my planned religion section, in how religions have power in certain after death beliefs that instantly appeal to people in life-threatening situations.
Hjelmeland, Heidi and Birthe L. Knizek. “Suicide and Mental Disorders: A Discourse of Politics, Power, and Vested Interests.” Death Studies, vol. 41, no. 8, Sept. 2017, pp. 481-492. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1080/07481187.2017.1332905.
This is a paper critiquing the widely accepted fact that mental illness is the primary cause of suicide. They challenge this based for the fact that when someone is dead, they cannot answer questions. Therefore, the people answering questions about the dead person’s mental condition will not be accurate. Also, since it is widely known that mental illness causes suicide, witness testimonies will be more likely to fit that supposed common knowledge. The authors as well take time to comment on how politics and the media influence what people believe on this topic.
I will use this source in my loosely planned suicide paragraph as a basis for statistics, as well as for how suicide can be used as a power play by people in power, and also touch on what suicide is and does for the suicidal person. I can use this article as a reason to say “it’s not fully understood” if I want to as well.
Moestrup, Lene and Niels Christian Hvidt. “Where Is God in My Dying? A Qualitative Investigation of Faith Reflections among Hospice Patients in a Secularized Society.” Death Studies, vol. 40, no. 10, Nov/Dec2016, pp. 618-629. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1080/07481187.2016.1200160.
This is a study of 16 Danish people’s religious beliefs in hospice care, the majority with cancer diagnoses. The goal is to identify how people’s religious beliefs evolve when they know they are likely to die. The people studied mostly did not adhere strictly to what religious background they had; instead, they looked for explanations that fit their situations. Despite the majority of those questioned never going to church, many held religious sentiments while in their end of life care.
I will use this study in my loosely planned section on religion, and how religion gains power with the concept of death, and how that applies too followers. By having afterlife policies, religions are more likely to capture believers, especially people in situations such as those in the study due to a comforting reassurance that you are not alone. This article also shows how people’s beliefs changes with circumstances, which I can use to further argue about the power of having an afterlife doctrine.
I hope her errors don’t scare you off. Even if you don’t like her, she has her uses.
Till next time.
cinsearly,
________-