Behind The Formaldehyde Curtain By Jessica Mitford Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
806
Cite

¶ … Formaldehyde Curtain paints a picture of an antiseptic departure to the netherworld. Mitford argues that the traditional viewing of the body is strictly an American aberration, concocted by morticians in order to display their morbid artistic talents and to make a buck at the expense of the bereaved. Furthermore, the author implies that American culture promotes denial in the face of death. Let us begin with the practice of embalming. Mitford begins by asking a rhetorical question "Is all this legal?" That, in and of itself, lets the reader know her bias. The author notes that there are laws in place dealing with processes to which a dead body may be subjected. The signature of the next of kin is needed before an autopsy, or a cremation, or before the body is turned over to a medical school for research purposes. However, "…no law requires embalming, no religious doctrine commends it, nor is it dictated by considerations of health, sanitation, or even of personal daintiness. In no part of the world but in Northern America is it widely used. The purpose of embalming is to make the corpse presentable for viewing in a suitably costly container." Handing...

...

Mitford's initial argument is slanted to persuade the reader that the practice of embalming is a sham.
Mitford goes on to wonder at the "docility of Americans who each year pay hundreds of millions of dollars for its [embalming] perpetuation, blissfully ignorant of what it is all about, what is done, how it is done." The procedure is done by an embalmer-restorative artist, a personage with a nine or twelve month course of knowledge, who subjects the body to a variety of tools and potions in order to fix or restore the body to a natural state.

This is done all to provide the family with an "open casket" in order to view the deceased. Mitford notes that people from other countries are amazed by all this fuss. A woman from England living in San Francisco could not comprehend why the mourners would care to look at "poor old Oscar lying there in his brown tweed suit, wearing a suntan makeup and just the wrong shade of lipstick. If I had not been extremely fond of the old boy, I have a horrible feeling that I might have giggled."

Mitford's strategy is to minimize the significance of…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Mitford, Jessica. "Behind the Formaldahyde Curtain." The Norton Reader, 12th ed. Linda H. Peterson and John C. Brereton Eds. New York W.W. Norton & Company, 2007, p. 310-316.


Cite this Document:

"Behind The Formaldehyde Curtain By Jessica Mitford" (2012, May 22) Retrieved April 26, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/behind-the-formaldehyde-curtain-by-jessica-111470

"Behind The Formaldehyde Curtain By Jessica Mitford" 22 May 2012. Web.26 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/behind-the-formaldehyde-curtain-by-jessica-111470>

"Behind The Formaldehyde Curtain By Jessica Mitford", 22 May 2012, Accessed.26 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/behind-the-formaldehyde-curtain-by-jessica-111470

Related Documents

Funeral Home Marketing How is market research used in a family-owned funeral home? The primary manner in which family-owned funeral homes market now -- apart from family referrals, of course -- is over the Web. Many third party companies provide interactive web sites for professionals in the Death Care Industry. They also provide funeral home search engines, national obituary listings, and virtual memorials. By creating a premier web presence, these companies provide Funeral

The Canadian Registry of Regulations is a useful source for demonstrating that the issues with which American trade commissions must respond are similar to those faced in Canada. Tight regulatory control can be observed in provinces such as Nova Scotia such as this source dictates with respect to embalming norms and practices. The document tells that "the Registrar shall, on behalf of the Board of Registration of Embalmers and Funeral

family-Owned funeral home do to be proactive with regard to safety management? The key to being proactive is to be attentive to the work environment and possible hazard areas. It is of paramount importance for any business owner to examine the working environment of the business and establish what areas and activities are at high risk of having an accident. Once the key accident-risk areas have been identified, steps can

family owned Funeral Home adopt performance appraisals? When dealing with a topic as sensitive as death, it can be difficult to know how to proceed with different families. The standardized implications of formal performance appraisals might seem to be counterintuitive to the nature of a family-based funeral parlor, especially if family members would be doing the critiquing during the meeting. But in a service-based industry, appraisals of individual and collective

Human Resources Training in a funeral home should be proactive, rather than reactive. Reactive training is training based on responding to needs as they are identified and as they become urgent. Proactive training refers to training employees before the need becomes urgent. In any service-based industry dealing with the public, proactive training is the better option because it means that employees are prepared when issues arise and that they can deal

Funeral Services Arranging a funeral is one of the most difficult things a human being will ever have to do. Aside from all the personal issues which are clearly at stake, there are also certain legal issues and state requirements that one also needs to be able to pay attention to. For instance, the Funeral Rule, which is administered by the FTC means that when arranging a funeral, one only needs