The Dead Man By Jennifer Kahn

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Jennifer Kahn graduated of Princeton at the University of California, Berkeley, fennifer.
Kahn was a writer and contribute editor of magazines for wired and national geographic. Stripped for parts appeared in wired in 2003. Kahn was awarded award in 2004 for a journalism fellowship from the American Academy of Neurology. She wrote this short essay describing how organs can be transplanted. The Stripped essay is an- eye opener. Though not many people tend to think of how a body should be maintained after death. Jennifer Kahn depicts a dramatic image for her audience. She uses the terminology “the dead man “though technically correct, the patient is brain dead, but his or her heart is still beating.
Kahn’s purpose in writing this essay was …show more content…

In Kahn’s piece, she describes the process of organ transplants and how donor organs are “harvested” for transplant into those need organ transplant. Her beings with the purpose of the world of transplant surgery. Explaining the process her experiences as well as fragile organ recovery process. In stripped for parts Kahn goes through a journey of harvesting of human organs. She shows how the dead man somehow saves a person’s life, no matter how unlikely. Reading this short essay, the feeling is almost surreal, however to the surgeons bodies are containers for organs. They explained how organs can stay safe and can be perused with blood while still in the body. Kahn describes the process of organ transplant at the earliest part of the transplant process; the donor. “Stripped for parts” is a short passage write by Jennifer Kahn, he r purpose in writing this passage was to share information about the process and the harvesting of organs. In this passage Kahn used three rhetorical appeals to convince the audience throughout her paper to portray what she was experiencing. Kahn used logos, a logical thinking appeal. Kahn in paragraph fifteen, she quoted about anesthesiologist saying “You spend all this time monitoring the heartbeat and the blood pressure, just to turn everything off when you are done and walk out. It is bizarre”. She used this logical appeal to describe how doctors felt about spending so much time keeping the dead person alive. This was just to …show more content…

However, I believe “Stripped for parts by Jennifer Kahn is a perfect example of processing writing because it describes how organs are harvested from a dead donor for transplantation. This purpose of process writing is not to describe how something happens rather than how to do it. Kahn did an exceptional job of explaining the process of organ transplantation in such a way that someone could want to continue to read the easy and benefit from it. An example of Process writing in this essay is when she states “None of this is I expected from an organ transplant”. Basically, when she arrived in the Northern California hospital, she expected a fast paced surgery culminating renewal to be

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