Preview

Summary Of Ann Patchett's 'State Of Wonder'

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
852 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary Of Ann Patchett's 'State Of Wonder'
How Old Is too Old?

In Ann Patchett’s State of Wonder, women of the Lakashi tribe have had the capability to conceive children until they die. Medical science should not attempt to make this possible for all women. Modern science needs to stop trying to improve human reproduction and let nature take its course. Just because giving birth at an elderly age can be done doesn’t mean that it should be done. Menopause should be the ending of women’s reproductive years. Dr. Swenson, a professor was sent to the rain forest to figure out why the Lakashi women were able to bear children well into their seventies. Their menstruation was everlasting. The woman could get pregnant until they died. The rest of their bodies would get old, but their eggs didn’t age. She finds out as soon as the women of the Lakshi tribe started menstruation they would start eating the tree bark. Dr. Swenson’s experiment was trying to extend fertility of
…show more content…
As the novel goes on we come to find out that Dr. Swenson is seventy-three years old and is pregnant. The baby was born dead with birth abnormalities, Sirenomelia, also known as mermaid syndrome. The legs of the fetus are fused together into a single tail, no visible genitalia, a very rare condition (Patchett326). The baby was nothing more than a scientific experiment. According to the author Ann Patchett, “children die out here constantly, that’s why so many of them are needed”(345-346). I believe children are constantly dying in the Lakashi tribe because of birth defects due to old age. The body of the women is not as strong as a younger person so it makes it hard for the baby to survive. Also, the woman will most likely suffer from complications, and the baby has a high chance of being born prematurely. In addition, because of old age there’s a higher chance of ectopic pregnancy. The fertilized egg can stay in your fallopian tube and damages it

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Hmong Case Study

    • 1084 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The traditional Hmong birth practices are very unique and different compared to American birth practices that I have grown up learning. In Hmong practices, if a woman fails to conceive, she would call in a shaman who could negotiate the patients’ health with the spirits. The woman could also avoid becoming infertile by respecting taboos like avoiding caves and respecting her food cravings. It is important that a woman gives birth in her house, and she can ease the pain of labor by drinking water that had been boiled with a key or having her family stand over bowls of sacred water chanting prayers. Lia’s birth however was a little different. Lia was born in the Merced Community Medical Center in California’s Central Valley. Lia’s placenta was incinerated; her mother, Foua,…

    • 1084 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A young girl prepares for the ceremony with the help of the village making her special tee-pee; preparing the meal for fifty or more guest. Most important is the choosing of her “Medicine Woman.” The young apache girl is dusted with pollen, which is the symbol for fertility. With a face of stone or showing emotions (no smiling) she dances for 12 hours. At the rising of the morning sun on the 4th day she appears and circles around her gift basket four times (for the stages of life). When Mabel was twelve Mabel’s mother accepted a large amount of money from a sixty-year old Colusa man and demanded that she would get married. However, Sarah prevented Mabel from being sold into marriage at an early age and gave her to the white lady named Mrs. Spencer who nurtured Mable through the process of acculturation (Rogoff, p.…

    • 967 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My weekly wonder is about the actress and environmentalist Shailene Woodley. Earlier in October, Woodley was arrested for trespassing and protesting against a planned oil pipeline. Because of this and her passion for the environment, Woodley was honored by the Environmental Media Association. Woodley gave a speech that persuades people to “Live a more compassionate life, because the ripple effect of that is what is going to save our oceans, our planet, and our race.” After the speech, Nikki Reed stated, “I love what she stands for. I hope she brings some much needed attention to what is going on right now.”…

    • 228 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the novel Wonder by R. J. Palacio, the reader gets to experience the disadvantage of a birth defect on the outside of his body, and they get to see how badly this defect affects August Pullman. August knows all the names everyone calls him when he’s not around “Ratboy. Freak. Monster. Freddy Krueger. E.T. Gross-out. Lizard face. Mutant.” (Palacio 79) August knows that everyone says mean things about him behind his back, he tries not to let anyone know that he hears them, and that the comments affect him because they are so mean. He already knows that how he looks affects people’s perceptions of him people’s perspectives of him, but he wishes that they could try not to judge, and treat him as harshly as everyone has been in the past. August…

    • 260 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    During the text ‘Year of Wonders’ knowledge, isolation and ignorance is a major factor, highlighted throughout the understanding of many different characters. Most of these factors are a result of the important and life-taken religion, which cause characters for example, Sam and his deserted and lonely life in the mineshaft where he worked and died, ‘Sam’s world was a dark, damp maze of rakes and scrins thirty feet under the ground… His whole life was confined by these things.’. People are limited to what they want to discover as the plague and their religion prohibit them from being rebellious. ‘Like most in this village, I had no occasion to travel father than the market town seven miles distant.’ Anna Frith notifies the reader how no one…

    • 144 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Macbeth Gaps in Silences

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages

    My lady has had two children the first was stillborn without a one single warm breath in it. The second child was a monster. Its face was caved in; its arms were abnormally small and twisted and its body was bent out of shape. This was no child. When its eyelids…

    • 845 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Margaret Sanger

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages

    My mother died at the age of 50 due to the strain of 18 pregnancies, consisting of 11 births and 7 miscarriages. I was the sixth out of those 11 children. In 1900, I began training as a nurse; I wanted to aid pregnant women. Since then, I’ve seen many poor young mothers become extremely ill and die of the strain from frequent pregnancies. During a house visit, I met a 28 year old mother of 3 with another child on the way, who died of self induced abortion. I remember seeing her body, I remember earlier visits, and I remember how desperate she was to get out of her situation. After witnessing these terrible tragedies I quit nursing in 1902 and devoted my life to helping women before they were driven to dangerous and extreme measures. I then got the idea of a “magic pill” that women could take to help prevent pregnancy.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Description: Eighteen months after her husband, Robert Capato, died of cancer, re¬spondent Karen Capato gave birth to twins conceived through in-vitro fertilization using her husband’s frozen sperm. Should technology be used to create live posthumously?…

    • 746 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Betty Rollin Motherhood

    • 836 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Soon Rollin began to explore how feminist found the true answer to women and their purpose in life, and that wasn’t for making babies. Evolution and technology has opened our eyes and showed us that even though we can have babies doesn’t mean we should, “unfortunately, the population curbers are tripped up by the romantic stubborn ideological hurdle”, (148). What Rollin means is that even with proper data and tools women are still popping out babies left and right. So what does this mean for the rest of the overpopulated world? More…

    • 836 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    On Abortion

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Mathewes-Green begins by stating that a young woman (i.e., about 18 years old) is already physically and biologically capable of bearing a child. But just because she can have a child, does not mean she should. The average woman has an average of 2.61 children. If every woman decided to have children at such a young age, then our population would increase exponentially. Many people already believe that the world is already over populated. By choosing to wait later in life and plan for a child, the world…

    • 1724 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Being a mother is a complex matter; so diverse that no one can truly define it. The Collin’s dictionary defines it as thus: ‘A female who has given birth to offspring’, however to many different women it means a range of things, to some a burden, to others a gift, care and nurture, the list is endless. Motherhood is often knitted into the very fabric of every woman’s being from when they were only children themselves. Doting relatives will proudly present a doll for the little girl, instilling in her a seed, from which the desire to become a mother grows. Our society over the recent decades has changed; women, who previously were expected to stay at home and look after their family and home, are now, being encouraged to work, be more independent, to have their own career. This means, marriages are now left to later in life (The average age of marriage was 28 in 2000, compared to 22 in 1970) and so children are not born until later in life. This has an adverse effect on the woman’s fertility, her likelihood of becoming pregnant when she is in her early 30’s, is 63%, compared to 86% in her early 20’s. Many fail to conceive, and so turn to IVF in hope of becoming a mother. In 1978, Robert Edwards, a revolutionary scientist sparked hopes in the hearts of such women, when his treatment he named IVF (in-vitro fertilization) led to the birth of the World’s first test tube baby. Since, 4.3 million babies have been born to parents through IVF. The treatment is available from the NHS; however, the couple must meet tight guidelines, otherwise they have to pay the weighty price tag between £4000-£8000 a cycle in the U.K. With a new standardised age limit of 35 to be put in place nationwide, is the NHS doing so for the right reason or all the wrong ones? I believe it to be the latter.…

    • 1715 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Unloved Child

    • 344 Words
    • 2 Pages

    "Society does not need more children; but it does need more loved children. Quite literally, we cannot afford unloved children - but we pay heavily for them every day. There should not be the slightest communal concern when a woman elects to destroy the life of her thousandth-of-an-ounce embryo. But all society should rise up in alarm when it hears that a baby that is not wanted is about to be born." ~Garrett Hardin…

    • 344 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maria has just turned fifteen years old when she was raped on a late April evening. A few weeks later, her period was late. She finally gathered the courage and told her parents of the terrible thing that had happened to her. Her mother took her to nearesr health center, which was a four hour bus ride away, and when the nurse informed Maria that she was pregant, Maria felt a perspiring wave of panic. All she wanted was to stay in school and be with her friends, like before. The though of giving birth to her rapist’s child made her nauseous and reminded her of that horrifying April evening. How was she supposed to take care of a baby, when she, herself was a child?…

    • 580 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Faye has always wanted to conceive children, but her hopes and dreams were shattered the day she received the horrible news. She was filled with emotions and was in tremendous grief, as if she had lost a loved one and was mourning. Faye did not want to accept the fact that she will never be able to give life to a child.…

    • 1492 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Children of Men

    • 1083 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The year is 2021, the setting is England, and mankind has indeed been turned aside to destruction. The human race has lost the ability to reproduce; for a quarter of a century, all male sperm has been infertile. The last children to be born left the womb in 1995, a year that has come to be known as “Omega,” the end of all things. A world without children is a world without a future and a world without hope. The best that the aging population can hope for is to live in comfort and prolong their lives as long as possible.…

    • 1083 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays