A mother’s love is the kind of love that gives meaning to life, when everything seems to have your back against the wall, somehow the reassurance of a mother’s presence and support takes away all of the pain. A bond created from early on inside your mother’s womb, is the same bond that is cherished for a lifetime. From mother’s day cards every year, to special surprises for her birthday, a mother’s love can never be replaced. This kind of love is truly indescribable. But what happens when you’re only left with the memories and vivid imagination of what life would have been like if you had more time to spend with your mother. Imagine not knowing anything about who your mother was, or what kind of woman she turned out to be, the only thing …show more content…
It was as if I was reading about my own mother and the different trials and tribulations that my family would have had to face after her death if we were in this predicament. I can’t even fathom having to handle life’s ups and downs without my mom by my side. I started to reminisce about some of the things my mother and I would do together like girls night out which consists of getting our nails done and watching lifetime movies and binge eating on all of our favorite foods, or having girl talk about everything under the sun, because I needed a mother’s point of view. Henrietta was more than just scientific research, she was a wife, a sister, a friend, a granddaughter, and most importantly she was a mother.
The HeLa cell line was integral in the innovation of noteworthy medical advances including: the polio vaccine which showed how certain cells were resistant to antibiotics, the cancer drug Tamoxifen, chemotherapy, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization, and treatments for influenza, leukemia, and Parkinson’s disease (Skloot, 100). In 1965, HeLa cells were fused with mouse cells, making the first human-animal hybrid (Skloot, 141). These hybrids were able to advance the field of genetics to study cell genomes, create monoclonal antibodies, and identify ABO blood groups, lowering the rejection rate for transplants (Skloot,
The story “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” that’s written by Rebecca Skloot. The author talks about a story happened in the 1950’s, and it’s effects still happening. The aspect that controls the story is power of privilege. In all places, in all times, power of privilege is specified for people who called elite. They get this power to control situations, but it does not mean they all deserve handling this power. This power created to control everything and improve or develop it. It is just considered under the actions that seem like what Skloot mentions in the story, but this power is related to all things in our life. Now, let’s go back to the story, and see the effects of that power under the wrong usage. At that period of time, the power of privilege was controlled by whites. The separation that was between blacks and whites, and the arrogance that some white people had encouraged them to insult black people. Dr. George Gey is the one of the doctors who used their power to do something no one at that time knew it’s consequences, which is taking the cells. On the other hand, Henrietta whose cells were stolen with out her permission. Finally, the results mostly affected Deborah which is Henrietta’s daughter.
The non-fiction book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, written by Rebecca Skloot, details the happenings and life of Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman and tobacco farmer who became a medical miracle in the 1950’s. The book is written in an attempt to chronicle both the experiences and tribulations of Henrietta Lacks and her family, as well as the events that led to, and resulted from, research done on Henrietta Lacks’ cells. Henrietta was a very average African American woman in this period; she had only a seventh-grade level education, and followed traditional racial and gender roles by spending her time has a mother and caretaker, as well as working on farms throughout her life until the involvement of the US in World War II brought her and her husband, “Day” Lacks, comparatively better work opportunities in industrial steel mills. However, after her death in 1951 Henrietta became much more than average to doctors at John Hopkins when the discovered that cells extracted from her cancerous tissue continued to live and grow much longer than any other tissue samples. Further investigation and isolation of these thriving cells led to the creation of the first ever immortal human cell line in medical history. The incredible progress in medicine made possible by Henrietta Lack’s tissue cells were not without downfalls, though. The treatments and experiences received by Henrietta and the effects it had on her and her family demonstrate both racial and gender
The book “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” brings up a problem in society that was a serious obstacle in the field of medicine in the 1950’s. This problem is that the individual rights of a human versus the general need of humanity. The general need of humanity is much more important than the rights of a human.
Rebecca Skloot’s bestseller, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, begins with a quote from World War II concentration camp survivor Elie Wiesel, “We must not see any person as an abstraction. Instead, we must see in every person a universe with its own secrets, with its own treasures, with its own source of anguish” (Wiesel qtd. in Skloot n. pag.). This quote serves as a preview of the book and its underlying moral purposes, as Henrietta Lacks and her family are continually treated as objects without rights to their privacy and without regards to their worth or feelings. The dehumanization of the Lacks family by the media and scientific community not only resulted in consequences for the family, but influenced society, as well.
Life. Life is a powerful word that is used in many situations and still make sense. In this case, life is used to tell the story of a woman’s life. The first chapter of the book paints an exceptionally vivid image of Henrietta running into Johns Hopkins Hospital on a rainy day in January of nineteen fifty-one. The second chapter steps back from Henrietta’s initial exam to nineteen twenty-one, the year Henrietta was born. The chapters in this section combine elements from Henrietta’s life, the entirely separate life of
Rebecca Skloot’s book “The immortal life of Henrietta lacks” chronicles the life, death, and immortality of Henrietta lacks. Her name is Henrietta lacks but most scientists only know her as HeLa. She was a poor southern tobacco land worker who worked on the same land her enslaved ancestors did. Henrietta was a young black woman whose cervical cancer cells became one of the most important factors in bringing about the most revolutionary advancements in both medicine and science in the twenty first century. Author Rebecca Skloot goes on a hunt to find out the story and women behind the infamous cells. After only being a given a brief summary of where the cells came at the age of sixteen. With pique curiosity skloot began to look for more information about this unknown woman only to come short with little to no information regarding her background. Deciding to take matters in her own hands she embarks in a journey that not only revealed the moving story of Henrietta and her family but the struggle the family goes through in order to stay at terms with what the field of medicine has done.
The novel The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, tells the journey between the author Rebecca and Deborah Lacks as they discover more about Deborah’s mother, Henrietta. As Rebecca is telling the story she includes herself as a character, and to me that aspect of the novel makes it easier to be able to connect with the other characters and the novel as a whole. Overall, Rebecca telling what she experienced throughout her time researching with Deborah gives much more depth to this novel. In this novel, you can truly relate to what Rebecca is feeling, see how the two bond together towards the end, and feel the impact that Deborah and even Henrietta had on Rebecca’s life.
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2010) is a result of Rebecca Skloot’s discovery and findings devoted to Henrietta’s life story along with her family members that revived the real person behind tremendous scientific accomplishments sprung of immortal HeLa cells’ exploitation. The research of HeLa cells has changed various areas of medical study and stepped forward scientific breakthroughs that continues today. HeLa cells were central for developing the polio vaccine; exposed secrets of breast cancer and leukemia; lead to important advances in vitro fertilization, cloning, genetic hybrids, gene mapping in virology, HIV, HPV, tuberculosis, telomerase, salmonella, live cell transport, for profit distribution of cells, scientific standards, space biology and nanotech (Skloot 2). HeLa, “Goddess of Death” (Skloot 250), cells have been exposed to household chemicals, drugs, cosmetics, viruses, radiation, and biological weapons (Skloot 252). Following Henrietta Lacks’ death in 1951 “from a vicious case of cervical cancer” (Skloot 3), doctors began a massive production of trillions of HeLa cells each week. The produce, more than fifty million metric tons, of a HeLa factory has been bought and sold by the billions. In spite of all of this, Henrietta Lacks, the woman from whom HeLa cells came, stayed unknown to the public for a half of the century and buried in an unmarked grave. Even Henrietta’s family for many years stayed ignorant about what had been accomplished using their
When further research was done on her cancerous cells, without her family’s consent, they were found to be known as the “immortal cells” or HeLa cells. In addition to explaining her experience, Skloot explains how the discovery of the HeLa cell moved science forward greatly; for research for many treatments, human genetics, chromosomal disorders, and many diseases. A big portion of Skloot’s reason for writing this book was to explain Henrietta’s story. Her family is greatly involved in interviews while writing this book. Those family members include Deborah Lacks, her daughter, David Lacks, her cousin, and Lawrence Lacks, Henrietta’s older brother. In addition, Doctors George Gey who was the head of tissue cultures at John Hopkins and worked with HeLa cells and Howard Jones who had first examined Lacks’
In Rebecca Skloot’s pioneering non-fiction book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, the complex story about the revolutionary HeLa cancer cells is told through the lives of the Lacks family and the multiple scientists and doctors that were part of one of the greatest breakthroughs of medical research in the twentieth century. The tale of the infamous and immortal HeLa cells was not just a scientific one, but one that involved struggle, confusion, ethical transgressions, and legal issues. Skloot writes about the life of Henrietta Lacks and her immortal cancer cells as well as her own research endeavor. Henrietta grew up with a very large family who all lived together and sometimes married internally. She eventually married and had kids with her first cousin, David. As an adult, Henrietta suffered from what she called a “knot” in her cervix, medically being cervical cancer. It all started when she started receiving cancer treatment from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, MD. John Gey had used cells from the tumor for medical research. At the age of 31, Henrietta died from her fatal disease, leaving her cells behind to continue her legacy. Despite the fact that her cells were researched throughout the world, the Lacks family was still living in extreme poverty with little to no opportunities for advanced education. Johns Hopkins conveyed limited information about Henrietta’s cells to her family to the extent that some family members did not even understand what a cell
The consideration of Henrietta Lacks as an abstraction instead of an individual becomes the source of a multitude
The book of 'The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks ' is about a mother that had die with a unknown cancers in which her cancerous cells stayed alive outside her body. Her family doesn 't knowns until many years later when reporters and doctors starts to talk about her mothers cells in world wide. Her family wants to learn more about her mothers cells but not many of the reporter and doctors are much help. Until Rebecca Skloots the authors of this book helps her family to understand more about Henrietta cells and helps the future Lacks family education. Throughout this book they were many themes that stand out, but what caught my attention the most were the lack of education, cells and tissue ownership, and the trust.
In The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Henrietta never complained about the side effects of the chemotherapy treatment while she was suffering them. She was a strong woman. Judging by the strength Henrietta displays in the book, I believe that she would approve of their use without her consent if she could look back today because she put everyone before herself even while she was dying: “Henrietta didn’t tell anyone what Jones said. She simply went on with her day as if nothing had happened, which was like her – no sense upsetting anyone over something she could deal with herself (46)” In this quote, Henrietta initially chose not to tell anyone about her cancer diagnosis.
A relevant study that derives from The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks would be the study of animal testing. In the novel, Skloot refers to animal testing on monkeys and how HeLa helped this situation. Neutralization tests usually used monkeys as subjects, “which were killed in the process.” However, there was no concern for the well beings of the monkeys but rather “monkeys were expensive,” and companies needed a source that was cheaper. This is where HeLa plays a role, as these cells “weren’t limited by space” and could “simply divide until they ran out of culture.” This was an advantage for these research companies, as HeLa cells were inexpensive and could be mass-produced. This topic plays an interest in me because I’ve always been curious
“The Immortal life of Henrietta Lacks” written by Rebecca Skloot exposes the truth about a colored woman, Henrietta Lacks, who died from cancer leaving five children and a husband behind. Before her death doctors took her cells,without her or her family consent, to do there own research and experiments. They discovered that her cells were immortal, they became the first immortal cells known as the HeLa cells..After the discoverment the Lacks family were never told that Henrietta Lacks cells were used, bought and sold. Through the HeLa cells the scientist had made money while Henrietta kids were mistreated and were in poor situations.It wasnt till 25 years later that the Lacks family found out about the HeLa cells doing miracles. Rebecca Skloot though “The immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” was able to explain the unethical situations that the Lacks family faced after Henrietta’s death.