Category Archives: Anatomy

Janacek’s Jenufa: an anatomy of anguish | Culture | The Sunday Times – The Times

Perhaps the most disappointing cancellation of the lockdown periods was Claus Guths new Royal Opera production of Janaceks Jenufa already well advanced in the rehearsal rooms last March with the mouthwatering cast of Asmik Grigorian, her RO debut, and Karita Mattila in the leading female roles of Jenufa and her stepmother, Kostelnicka Buryova.

Compensation of sorts came last weekend, when Simon Rattle raised his baton at Berlins Staatsoper Daniel Barenboims opera house to conduct Damiano Michielettos new production, socially distanced on stage and closed to the public, with the Finnish soprano Camilla Nylund as the secretly pregnant heroine, and Evelyn Herlitzius as the infanticidal matriarch who kills her stepdaughters baby to protect her own and Jenufas reputation.

The opera, premiered in

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Janacek's Jenufa: an anatomy of anguish | Culture | The Sunday Times - The Times

Nikiea Redmond and Kirsten DAndrea Hollander Discuss Their 10-Year Documentary with Anatomy of Wings | Slamdance 2021 [Exclusive Interview] – LRM…

Nikiea Redmond and Kirsten DAndrea Hollander directedAnatomy of Wings.

Anatomy of Wings is a ten-year journey for many participants in the documentary.

The film started off as a small film project for young children ended to be a coming-of-age documentary of ten young girls for half their lives under a mentorship program in Baltimore.

Heres the synopsis:

At first, gathered to create an after-school film project, ten Black middle school girls return each week to collaborate with their Black and white mentors on a feature-length documentary about their own coming-of-age in Baltimore City. Weeks turn into years. Then, shortly before the girls high school graduation, a sea of misunderstanding arises about whats to come. The self-defined second family is left to question if their solidarity will survive the realities of living in a world of racial inequity.

It all started out at Dunbar Middle School, where mentors Nikiea Redmond and Kirsten DAndrea Hollander kickstarted an afternoon weekly program called Wings. Initially created for young girls in middle school to learn about video skills, the formal curriculum quickly starts to fade away and the weekly meetings organically begin to shift towards discussing the vulnerabilities of the girls experiences. Through trust, mentorship, and leaps of faith, a deep bond is created with the girls that last the test of time. What was only intended to be a 10-week course ends turning into a 10+ year experience, where the girls are cinematographers with autonomy in framing how their stories are shared with the world.

The ten young women being mentored, included Brittany Backmon, Teshavionna Tazz Mitchell, Shelia Butler, Brienna Brown, Marquise Weems, Danisha Harris, Cami McCrief, Quandra Jones, Tywana Reid, and Quanisha Carmichael. The Wings mentors included Kirsten DAndrea Hollander, Jackie Duvall-Harvery, Jane Cottis, Nikiea Redmond, Kata Frederick, and Cinnamon Triano.

LRMs Gig Patta discussed with co-directors Nikiea Redmond and Kirsten DAndrea Hollander regards to the 10-year documentary of their own lives.

Nikiea Redmond received her bachelors in corporate communications from the University of Baltimore in 2011. Redmond serves as a liaison for political organizations and community groups in East Baltimore. In 2004, she received the Sam Lacy Award for Youth Leadership from The Afro-American Newspaper. The following year, she was the 2015 recipient of the Black Wall Street Journal Award for her work in Baltimore City.

Kirsten DAndrea Hollander is a full-time professor at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA, where she directs the MFA Filmmaking program. In 2008, she launched the Wings Video Skills After School Program for Girls, which lead to this documentary. In 2011, she was selected to the Independent Filmmaker Project Fellowship to launch her first feature-length documentary Us, Naked: Trixie & Monkey.

Anatomy of Wings documentary currently streams at the Slamdance Film Festival. Visit http://www.slamdance.com for ticket information.

Watch the exclusive interview below. Let us know what you think.

Source: LRM Online Exclusive, Raw Honey Films

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Nikiea Redmond and Kirsten DAndrea Hollander Discuss Their 10-Year Documentary with Anatomy of Wings | Slamdance 2021 [Exclusive Interview] - LRM...

Anatomy of an Insurrection – Washington Monthly

Screen Grab/C-Span

Democratic Congressman and House Impeachment Manager Joe Neguse

In a well-run courtroom, the judge makes the issues clear: What is the charge? What evidence is important? What do the lawyers need to prove? What does the trier of fact (jury, or judge in a bench trial) need to determine, to resolve the dispute?At the end of the trial, the judge lays out exactly what the jury must decidefor example, did the defendant in fact fire the fatal shot? If so, did the defendant act in self-defense? If it wasnt in self-defense, did the defendant intend to kill the deceased? Was the killing premeditated? And so on.

This weeks Senate proceedings are, as a matter of constitutional text, a trial; but there is no judge to guide the advocates or to provide legal instructions to the Senators who must decide.

Thus, on Friday, the Senate and the nation heard the final evidence in two different casesone laid out by the House in its Article of Impeachment and the accompanying trial brief, and the other rebutted by the lawyers for former President Donald Trump.

The House Article charges that, beginning months before the insurrection of January 6, Trump deliberately lied about the result of the election, attempted through corrupt means to invalidate it, and encouraged violence to prevent the constitutionally required certification of the electoral-vote total. His campaign apparatus spent as much as $50 million to spread the lie via advertising. He contacted state officials in contested states and pressured and threatened in an attempt to get them to set aside the vote and give him the states electoral votes.

As spelled out in the brief and the video evidence, he repeatedly encouraged violence against his political enemies and asked the most dangerous extremists in the country to stand back and stand by. He called his followers to a wild! rally on January 6, at which it was known to all in the government that violence was being planned, and thenaware of the intent of many in the crowd directly told them to march on the Capitol. When they got there, the mob, predictably, turned violentand the Vice President and the Speaker of the House were nearly assassinated. During the most dangerous hours of the assault, while five people were being killed, the President (despite desperate pleas from his allies) remained silent; he refused to call on his loyal insurgents to stop, and he did not dispatch federal law enforcement and military personnel to defend the Capitol, the members of Congress and the besieged U.S. Capitol Police. Afterwards, he sent the insurgents home with praise and the assurance that we love you.

As seen by the prosecution, then, the charge is that Trump engaged in a course of criminal action over months, which involved legitimization of violence, targeting of mass rage, defamation of individuals whose lives were endangered, organization of an insurrectionary gathering, passive acceptance of the violence when under way and then subsequent ratification of it once it was over.

If I were defending Trump from this charge, I would try to do what Trumps lawyersformer Pennsylvania prosecutor Bruce Castor, Alabama litigator David Schoen, and Philadelphia lawyer Michael T. Van der Veenattempted. Faced with vivid evidence of Trumps course of conductcalls for violence, repeated false claims of a stolen election, expenditure of time and money to gather a mob, knowledge that the crowd would be dangerous, and rhetoric that did nothing to discourage the violencethey refused to engage the issue.

All of that stuff, it turns out, is irrelevantDonald Trump, they argue, is being tried for speaking the word fight. And since we all use the word fight, he cant be guilty. Dont believe me? Heres a clip of Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Nancy Pelosi, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Chuck Schumer and Madonna and Johnny Depp and (at one point I had to answer the door) probably His Holiness the Dalai Lama all using bad words like fight. To make that clearer, sometimes the video was repeatedly looped so it seemed like the speaker was saying fight five or six times in a row. That proves Trump is innocent. Why? Well, the word fight is a word. Words are speech. The First Amendment protects speech, so Trump can say fight.

Constricting the time frame of events is a time-honored lawyers tactic. In a courtroom, judges may put some limits on the freedom to distort the chronological frame of a criminal indictment. But here, the case is put to the Senate (and, equally important, the nation) as two different cases; if the past few years are any guide, it will be analyzed purely according to the pre-existing political commitments of the listeners.

In their first appearance on Tuesday, February 9, the Trump legal team proved incapable of even laying out that argument. Instead, they described a terrifying threat: One day a trial-happy Senate would come back and impeach Eric Holder. On Friday, having had time to recoup, they did get the he-said-fight argument in outline form. To them, they say, the only question is whether when Trump said fight like hell to the rally on January 6, these words were (1) unprotected by the First Amendment and (2) so powerful that they created a blood-crazed zombie mob that surprised everyone by assaulting the Capitol.

Thus posed, of course, the answer must be no. Trumps behavior, as he claimed, was totally appropriate and its just one a jolly bad break that the criminals in the mob chose at that precise moment to run wild and engage in acts that no one deplored more than Donald Trump himself.

Its very hard to believe that the defense presentation changed a single mind. Members of the House and Senate themselves were present on January 6 (as the defense team was not). Members of Congress know what happened. Many of the were terrified and appalled; remarkably many, however, found the breach of the Capitol to be just part of a working day that began with a spurious challenge to the electoral votes from Arizona and thenafter an interlude of violence and bloodended in a similar false challenge to the electoral votes from Pennsylvania. The aim of those challengers and the rioters alike was cancelling the results of the 2020 election. The means chosen were different; for some, parliamentary motions, for others, stun guns, bear mace, zip ties, clubs and spears, and a gallows. But the intent was the same. Theres no evidence that most of the challengers repent their actions; nor is there evidence that Donald Trump feels anything but perhaps regret that the insurrection failed.

This is the way to understand the contention that the First Amendments free speech clause bars the conviction of Donald Trump. Theres no doubt that Trump could tell his followers to fight. He might even use the word several times. And look! Look! Democrats say the word fight too!

But the charge is not limited to one speech on January 6. It is of a plan, and perhaps a full-fledged criminal conspiracy, initiated months before and moved forward with communications, organization, finance, and political support from Trump and his White House, which involved repeated lies and corrupt behind-the-scenes maneuvers and led predictably to a violent assault that came close to destroying our Congress.

The First Amendment doesnt cover planning, financing, organizing, and inciting an armed attack on the United States. If you are convinced by the Houses evidence, then you will favor conviction. Or you can look the other way because what about Nancy Pelosi. Those are your choices.

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Anatomy of an Insurrection - Washington Monthly

Greys Anatomy Star Hypes A Terrifying And Exhilarating Season 17 Return – Cinema Blend

On top of that, the winter finale saw another local hospital hit capacity, so that now all new patients have to head to Grey Sloan. Opal, the sex trafficker from Season 16, is back after two girls were (finally) rescued from the grasp of one of her co-conspirators, and DeLuca and his sister are on her trail with results that might be less than pleasant for our heroes. Add to that everything that Meredith is going through, and, basically, all is not quiet on the western front. It's a big ol' mess, y'all. But, according to what Jesse Williams said about the spring premiere, the situation can definitely get worse.

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Greys Anatomy Star Hypes A Terrifying And Exhilarating Season 17 Return - Cinema Blend

Dissecting Anatomy Lab: The Lifecycle of Anatomy Instruction – Pager Publications, Inc.

Editors Note: We are featuring a series of essays by Kate Crofton on anatomy lab. Her essays are based on 27 interviews with medical students, faculty, clinicians and donors. This is the third installment in the series. Read the second installment here.

It is the day before the first anatomy lab for the first-year medical students, and a single professor walks alone, up and down rows of tables laden with twenty-six naked, embalmed bodies. He silently shares a few minutes with the donors, a private thank-you. Soon the donors will be covered in white sheets, and the students will tentatively spill through the locked wooden doors of the labs, a rush of anticipation, teamwork, questions and learning. But right now, no one makes a sound. There is no buzzing of saws, whirring of the suction machine, or gentle clinking of hemostats and Metzenbaum scissors against the metal tables, no nervous laughter, exclamations of discovery or confused mumblings.

The professor will be joined by an eclectic team of his colleagues. They are educators who use dead people as their teaching medium. They spend hours on end in rooms reeking of formaldehyde. Above all, they care deeply about doing their work with respect. With their turquoise gloves, blue paper surgical shoe covers, rainbow of expo markers, memorized atlas page numbers, thoracic spine necklaces, golden dissecting scissors and pockets full of little colored wires, they will help each student learn to find their way.

These professors find beauty in anatomy: the relationships of the structures to each other, the functionality of the human body, unique variations and even pathology. The brachial plexus dissection is a favorite of one professor, a lab which reveals a complicated bundle of nerves branching and recombining to serve the arm. For another, the most beautiful structures are the hands and the head, the parts worn outside of clothing that express personality and individuality. They love the search for structures: When you first look at the tissue, it looks like a messnon-descript gauze. There is no real reason to think there are nerves or vessels running through that. But then once you find them and then you see how tightly packed things are, you realize just how incredible it is.

Another instructor asserts that her upbringing in a family of hunters contributed to her early interest in anatomy and her understanding of the place of death in the lifecycle. My brothers and my dad hunted, and so from the time that I was really little, I was used to seeing deer butchered in our garage. I was struck by the intricacy and the beauty of how a body could be put together and function properly I can remember my mom buying one pound of ground beef, and she would make our meals for the week goulash, Spanish rice, things that would spread it out. I realized that deer put meat on our table and kept deer from starving; it managed the population. Death is a natural part of life.

My dad and brother are also deer hunters, and I remember deer carcasses hanging in my dads shop during my childhood. I perched on overturned five-gallon buckets amidst sawdust and pine two-by-fours and watched as my dad sliced away the hide and wrapped chunks of bloody meat in crisp white freezer paper. I loved the warm, buttery taste of venison and intuited more easily then the cycling of life into death into life again. The deer were beautiful, running through our hay fields, and they were beautiful still as carved up slabs of meat in the deep freezer.

To find beauty in the anatomy lab might seem crass; after all the mechanical process of disassembling the donor is brutal, and at the end the body is a carcass, a dried-out pile of flayed skin and bones. Professors acknowledge this difficulty, I am always intrigued by different things that I see in the lab beautiful dissections and I know the word beautiful is sometimes a complicated word in that space Youre right, its by seeing many donors over time that you come to appreciate that were all the same, theres a pattern, but were also all unique. Everybody has an interesting story, and their body often tells that.

I interrogate the professors for a list of the most fascinating anatomy theyve seen. They oblige with developmental abnormalities: situs inversus, horse-shoe kidneys, bifid muscles, extra blood vessels and abnormal arrangements of nerves. They also mention impressive pathology: swollen cirrhotic livers, big black lymphatic balls of cancer, white hardened atherosclerotic plaque, occluded coronary vessels and cerebral hemorrhages. They recount biomedical devices and remnants of medical procedures, too, a demonstration of medicines advances to thwart pathology: coronary bypasses and stents, pacemakers, orthopedic prosthetics and deep-brain-stimulating electrodes.

I ask one professor if theres any anatomical anomaly that hes still hoping to see in his career. He gently chides, No, its not like Im going to go out looking for donors to have things that Im interested in; thats not the point. And I realize that I have indeed missed the point. The anatomists dont see donors as collections of interesting or rare anatomy but instead see them as their partners in teaching us.

The anatomy instructors are guardians. One professor explains that she feels a deep sense of responsibility to take care of the donors so that they may teach her students, Its funny, Ive described myself as the curator of those donors. I feel like Im a caretaker of sorts. When I walk into that anatomy lab, I find it to be a very comforting space. When I go in there its quiet and I think about the various lives that are represented by the donors in there, and I think about that gift that they were willing to share to let all of you learn.

I picture an art gallery, with paintings carefully framed on the walls. The anatomy instructor appears, robed in a long white coat and blue scrubs, hair held in place precisely with a barrette. She softly dusts each painting, adjusts the lighting, and adds a placard underneath each one so that it may be better understood. My job is to make sure that all of them are cared for well and that they are the best learning tool for all of you to learn that anatomy and have it be memorable.

The relationship between professor and donor can prompt reflection and even conflict, in the professor. When a young medical professional died of a drug overdose and donated his body to medical education, it provoked one lab instructor to be more reflective than usual. An eighty-seven-year-old died of a heart attack Ive heard that one before, but a twenty-seven-year-old is there something thats fundamentally been lost even more in the twenty-seven-year-old? For whatever reason I did stop and think more and feel a little bit sad, not to the point of tears, but sad and reflective.

She pauses, and then continues, I also felt grateful and then felt a little sick about feeling grateful because that dissection was really beautiful. It looked so much like [the anatomy textbook] a lot of the time the muscle integrity, color, shading, shape and distinction. Things werent blending together, there was no marbling of fat infiltrating the muscles. It was such a beautiful, easy dissection and the students learned so much.

These professors didnt always have such mature relationships with the donors. One faculty member recalls her first experience in an anatomy lab as a student, looking at the donor and thinking, I dont know if I recognize you as a personor a dissection tool. I relate deeply to her memory, and it resonates also with many of my interviews with students. As novices in anatomy, its much more difficult and requires a more deliberate effort to switch between viewing the cadaver as a body and as a person. I am cutting the body, and the person is gone, but the person chose for the body to be here. Its clunky. The professors are more fluid with this duality and coexist with it in a more peaceful way.

When I ask the same professor whether she now views the donor as a person or a body she responds with an analogy: Its like electrons in orbitals. They can be in one place but never in-between. I try to maintain respect for what I imagine as the person that they were in the decision that they made to be here, the life that they had. But at the same time, I dont believe theyre alive anymore or have any sort of soul inhabiting whats left. Theres all this meat and bones left behind, but theres nothing that can be hurt or embarrassed. The donors are gifts, teaching tools, partners and even friends, extending an invitation to come learn.

The anatomy lab is not an immediately comfortable place for everyone, and even the professors, whom we view as our seasoned guides, once needed to habituate to the space. An instructor recalls her first time leading an anatomy course, I had a really profound visceral response to every dissection. For the first half hour walking in there, I felt nauseated, I felt faint. I always made sure I was bracing myself on a table or against a wall just in case, and I didnt admit it to anyone because I was in charge. I recollect my own experience in lab, repeating a silent mantra mind over matter as the room clouded over and the din grew distant, willing myself to remain vertical. Mind over matter carried me through the course for weeks, and I left the lab each day feeling like a soggy balloon, sapped of all emotional reserves.

The professor continues, Ive been trying to figure out what changed. My first time [as a student] I was fine, and this time Im falling apart and not admitting it to anyone. I think a couple things the crazy amount of stress of trying to learn anatomy, run the course and teach all at the same time. Also, in that instructor role, you cant immerse yourself in dissection. Youre walking from one table to another and watching as people make these incisions and take things apart, and you dont have control over it yourself.

She describes being in lab one day when students were dissecting the lower extremity. At that point, the legs had been severed from the trunk of the body, and they were propped at ninety-degree angles to practice the anterior drawer test. A living person might assume the same position, perhaps strewn out on the sofa reading a book, feet on the cushions and knees bent in the air. It didnt feel right, because it [aligned] too much with what I think an intact human looks like. She adapted and the second year developed strategies to be more comfortable as an instructor in the space. I knew that if I could reduce the smell, that helps. I got Vicks Vapor Rub, and I would wear a mask that year. I realized that getting hands-on as soon as possible helped, so I made sure to get in on someones dissection as soon as I got in the room. Partly just seeing it again and again, I habituated.

To our instructors, the donors are far more than dead bodies; they are teachers. Textbooks and plastic models only represent our notion of typical, but donors show us great variation. In an even voice with steady conviction, an anatomy instructor explains, I see [the donors] silently saying Bring the book over here, and if you dont see it, change the book because this is real. The anatomical donor population provides an immediate education of what we currently understand about how human bodies function and some of the ways they stop functioning. The donors inform our knowledge and make us better scientists and clinicians.

They also move us to be better people. Groups in power have historically used pseudoscientific arguments to justify their social status. For example, in the 1800s Samuel George Morton thought that it was possible to define the intellectual ability of a race by skull size. Rigorous scientific methods and access to good data have refuted his racist claims. If our anatomy is all the same, then how can biology determine the inherent superiority of one class of people? As one professor believes, the donors show us the importance of inclusion and respect for all human beings. There used to be quite a bit of wrong speculation of how bodies were put together and how they functioned. Over the past century, we finally have moved into an understanding of how things really work, and the donor population is a large part of the reason why we now understand.

The donors help us understand anatomy, and they also help us come to terms with our own mortality. I ask one professor if anatomy has changed his view of death. He tells me no, rather its the opposite; because of donors, his personal grief has emerged in the classroom. The year that his father died, the first day of class fell on his fathers birthday and there happened to be a cadaver in lab that resembled the professors father. A first-year student in that class had recently lost his mother to breast cancer. When the student peeled back the white sheets in preparation for anterior dissections, he discovered a breast-less chest bearing the scars of a mastectomy, and so we bothhad these acute reminders of the grief that we were going through. When the same professors wife of thirty-eight years died of colon cancer, he knew that he would need to take extra care in order to be able to teach the gastrointestinal anatomy. Well its not like all twenty-six cadavers died of colon cancer. So it wasnt something every day that I had to deal with. The stress for me is the teaching part; I want to make sure that Im doing a good job You put things aside, and you cant be thinking about grief and the death of someone all the time, you just wouldnt be functional. Its not that I intentionally put it aside, its just other things become more important in the moment and then I go home and think about it.

Anatomy instruction has both accelerated and become more humanistic over the last fifty years. A professor contemplates his first anatomy course as a student in the 1970s, I can remember that there were students who put clothes on their cadavers. Surprisingly there was not a lot of student reaction to that; people just werent as thoughtful or as sensitive about it as they are now. We didnt do it, but someone did it to our cadaver. Thats probably my most vivid memory. Decades later, he shifts uneasily in his chair and his eyes moisten. Some of our professors rules make more sense now. Photography is not allowed in the gross anatomy labs, only medical students may enter the locked space, and we are warned to treat the donors with respect for their personhood.

He continues reminiscing, Although [medical school] had a body donation program, we also had unclaimed bodies. Our cadaver was African-American, and Im going to guess that he was unclaimed just from the wear and tear. So thats changed now too, the anatomical program has changed. Anatomical gift programs really began to get formalized in the mid-20th century and werent really codified well until the 1960s. All the cadavers used at our medical school today are donated. I try to imagine what it would feel like to dissect a body that was discarded at the hospital or county morgue, perhaps because the decedents family couldnt afford to pay a bill. It feels ugly. I am grateful for my donors gift of his body, and also immensely grateful that it was a gift. The professor agrees that he is much more comfortable with our exclusively donor-based anatomy program.

A students time in anatomy lab today is abbreviated compared to our professors educations. [My medical anatomy class] had three hundred hours. When I first came here in 1985 we had a one hundred ninety hour [anatomy] course and one hundred sixty [of those hours] were laboratory. We are down now to less than one hundred hours of lab. Surprisingly the detail [that we teach you] hasnt changed that much. We had to become more efficient. Our education today prioritizes early clinical exposure and multi-disciplinary learning. A consequence though, is that it is more difficult for the anatomy professors to get to know their students, and theres less time for students to process the experience as they rush to learn all the material.

What do our anatomy instructors want us to learn? Hopefully some basic anatomy, replies a professor, but I know that unless you are using it, its going to disappear. So, Im sure that if I started asking you questions I laugh nervously, and stammer, please dont desperately trying to remember the branching of the cranial nerves in case he does quiz me. Maybe he has a skeleton in his office that he will pick up, pointing to the pinprick fossa of the skull? But he continues, More importantly is when you get to the clerkships during your third and fourth years and someones going to ask you some anatomy do you know where to go to review that? Have we made you a good learner?

Other professors respond, We need to have excellent physicians,and to bean excellent physician you have to know anatomy. The best way to teach anatomy is through dissection.

Equally important, youve learned about yourselves.

You have to learn teamwork, patience, perseverance, humility and gratitude.

Its these moments: watching lightbulbs go off for students as they make a connection across disciplines or overcome challenges, that come up again and again as our teachers biggest joys. Ive always been motivated to teach, and that stems from when I was a little kid taking swimming lessons. By the time that I graduated from tadpole to polliwog, I would help as a teachers aide for the group behind me. I loved when people were able to gain a skill, and I found being part of that process to be very rewarding. I always felt somehow that teaching needed to be part of what I would do for a living. Teaching forms a key part of their identities.

And so, I am surprised, though maybe I shouldnt be, that when I ask if they want to be anatomical donors when they die, a high proportion of our professors responds with an emphatic YES. (One says that if hes healthy enough, hed prefer to be an organ donor. Others qualify that theyd personally be interested in whole body donation but would need to take their familys needs into account, and some havent yet settled on their end of life wishes.) These are people who know with staggering detail everything that happens in the anatomy lab. They know the entire series of maneuvers of the gloved fingers, scalpels, scissors, chisels, and saws required to deconstruct and study what may someday be their cold, bloodless bodies on the dissecting tables.

Its because I know exactly what happens in that space that its important to me. I realize how thorough the dissections are, I realize how much students can learn, I realize how memorable those experiences are, and I realize that it is a space for learning more than just anatomy. If I can support that for one more year, thats incredibly important to me.

I imagine that I am again a first-year student several weeks into gross anatomy lab, and the funeral director visits my table to tell us about our donor. How startling it would be to learn that the body that we had been dissecting belonged to an anatomy professor. One instructor tells me that she loves the ideal of the reveal, Its meta an anatomy professor teaching anatomy again, thats so cool. I am also hoping that it will give comfort to students who feel uncomfortable knowing that theyre dissecting donors who didnt know all the details. [For example] were going to bisect your pelvis thats the one that gets most people to know that most people in the room didnt know that, but heres someone who knew all the nitty gritty details of what was going to happen, and they chose it anyway. I hope that it would give them comfort. They are teachers in life and teachers in death.

Image Credit: Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine. Image is in the public domain.

Contributing Writer

University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry

Kate Crofton is a fourth year medical student at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in Rochester, New York, class of 2021. In 2016, she graduated from Carleton College with a Bachelor of Arts in biology. In her free time, she enjoys writing poetry, reading narrative nonfiction, and baking sourdough. After graduating medical school, Kate intends to pursue a career in OB/GYN.

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Dissecting Anatomy Lab: The Lifecycle of Anatomy Instruction - Pager Publications, Inc.

Grey’s Anatomy Coming Soon To Disney+ (UK/AU/IE/NZ) – What’s On Disney Plus

Disney+ is set to get a massive expansion on Tuesday 23rd February when the sixth brand is added called Star, which will the home to thousands of hours of movies and television from Disneys creative studios, including Disney Television Studios, FX, 20th Century Studios, 20th Television, Touchstone, and more, enhanced by the addition of local programming from the regions.

One of the biggest shows in the world is Greys Anatomy, which will be coming to Disney+ as part of the launch of Star. This show has been the recipient of the 2007 Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Television Series and nominated for multiple Emmys, including Outstanding Drama Series, Greys Anatomy is considered one of the great television shows of our time. The high-intensity medical drama, now in its 17th season, follows Meredith Grey and the team of doctors at Grey Sloan Memorial who are faced with life-or-death decisions on a daily basis. They seek comfort from one another, and, at times, more than just friendship. Together they discover that neither medicine nor relationships can be defined in black and white.

This series consists of 369 episodes, spread across seventeen seasons. There will be some regional differences in terms of how many seasons will be available. Australia and New Zealand will be getting seasons 15, 16 and 17, while the UK and Ireland will be getting seasons 1 through to 15. This is due to existing streaming contracts in these countries.

Greys Anatomy stars Ellen Pompeo as Meredith Grey, Chandra Wilson as Miranda Bailey, James Pickens Jr. as Richard Webber, Kevin McKidd as Owen Hunt, Kim Raver as Teddy Altman, Jesse Williams as Jackson Avery, Camilla Luddington as Dr. Jo, Caterina Scorsone as Amelia Shepherd, Kelly McCreary as Maggie Pierce, Giacomo Gianniotti as Andrew DeLuca, Chris Carmack as Atticus Link Lincoln, Jake Borelli as Levi Schmitt, Greg Germann as Tom Koracick, Richard Flood as Cormac Hayes and Anthony Hill as Winston Ndugu. With early episodes also starring Sandra Oh, Katherine Heigl, Justin Chambers, T. R. Knight and Patrick Dempsey.

Greys Anatomy was created and is executive produced by Shonda Rhimes (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder, Station 19). Betsy Beers (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder, Station 19), Mark Gordon (Saving Private Ryan), Krista Vernoff (Shameless), Debbie Allen, Zoanne Clack, Fred Einesman, Andy Reaser and Meg Marinis are executive producers. Greys Anatomy is produced by ABC Signature.

Are you looking forward to Greys Anatomy arriving on Disney+ in the UK, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

Roger has been a Disney fan since he was a kid and this interest has grown over the years. He has visited Disney Parks around the globe and has a vast collection of Disney movies and collectibles. He is the owner of What's On Disney Plus & DisKingdom. Email: Roger@WhatsOnDisneyPlus.com Twitter: Twitter.com/RogPalmerUKFacebook: Facebook.com/rogpalmeruk

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Grey's Anatomy Coming Soon To Disney+ (UK/AU/IE/NZ) - What's On Disney Plus

Video: ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’ | Anatomy of a Scene – The New York Times

My name is Shaka King. Im the co-writer, director, and one of the producers on Judas and the Black Messiah. This scene happens pretty early in the movie. William ONeal, played by Lakeith Stanfield, has just used a fake FBI badge to steal a car and get arrested for that. And here, he meets FBI agent Roy Mitchell, played by Jesse Plemons. So the first shot that we saw earlier was of ONeals feet and blood seemingly falling from where you dont know. It could be from his face. It could be from his hands. And its a time jump. You havent seen the assault that occurred on ONeal. And with us, we were trying to, as early as possible, just establish that this is a film that is not going to give you a lot of exposition. its not going to kind of hold your hand through this experience. We want you as a viewer to fill in the blanks with your imagination as much as possible. Because ideally, we believe that it puts you in the perspective of the person in the movie. This scene is one of the most important scenes in the movie, because it highlights a key factor that were trying to get across to audiences, which is, in a lot of ways, this scene is about the danger of being apolitical. We really wanted to hit home the old phrase, if you stand for nothing, youll fall for anything. Were you upset when Dr. King was murdered? What? Were you upset when Dr. King was murdered? I dont know. We see William ONeal questioned by Roy Mitchell about how he felt after Martin Luther Kings assassination. ONeal admits that it bothered him somewhat. And then, when Mitchell asked him how he felt about Malcolm Xs assassination, and ONeal says, I never really thought about it. And you see Roy Mitchell, in response to that question, smile a little bit, because hes found the person that he thinks is a perfect informant. In terms of how we employed the close-ups, I knew we wanted to save our most extreme close-ups for ONeals look up at the end. That is a pleading look of, like, get me out of here. Ill do anything to get out of here.

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Video: 'Judas and the Black Messiah' | Anatomy of a Scene - The New York Times

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Season 17: Everything You Need to Know About the Spring Premiere – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Fans have been missing Greys Anatomy since the show went on its winter hiatus. Recently, it was announced that the break would actually last a week longer than originally expected and we wouldnt be seeing the Greys Anatomy cast again until March 11. Now, Jesse Williams, who plays Dr. Jackson Avery, is letting fans in on what the rest of Greys Anatomy Season 17 will hold.

This season has already been very taxing for the Greys Anatomy cast. Dr. Miranda Bailey lost her mother to coronavirus (COVID-19) and Meredith Grey has been battling the virus for most of the season. The rest of the cast has been dealing with the COVID pandemic as well, while trying to cope with the fact that they may actually lose Meredith.

Episode seven of Greys Anatomy is set to premiere on March 11, and according to Williams, its going to be crazy.

Its pure madness, Williams told Entertainment Tonight. Ive got to say, we have found a way to have really highly concentrated, dense episodes towards the middle of the season with a lot of this incredible combination of loss and joy and progress in these characters lives. But when [we] come back, yeah, its going to be fairly terrifying and exhilarating.

RELATED:5 Greys Anatomy Episodes That Changed the Shondaland Series Forever

As with every season of Greys, each character has their own personal drama, but paired with the fact that the doctors have been working nonstop to fight the virus, has meant that this season has been especially hard for almost all of the characters.

Theresa lot of personal journeys and theres a lot at stake losing yourgrip on whats real and whats stable in life, and dealing with the pandemic on the show has been really cathartic for viewers to feel, Williams said. Yes, it has value in imagining elsewhere, but theres also value [in] understanding. A show like this is news for some people and I dont mean thateverything is a fact but it is a way to get a human side to statistics to stories and to nameless, faceless stories. These are actual people that have loved ones that were born that his sister and a mom and a brother and theyre struggling with it theyre not just a stat or a demographic so thats important.

If youve been a longtime fan of Greys Anatomy, then you know that Meredith has had a number of brushes with death but has always come out on the other side. This time, seems a little different and even Williams is worried about the character.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy: Does the Cast Get Along With Katherine Heigl Now?

I am a little nervous too, he told the outlet. Theres got to be hope. As far as I can see, theres hope.Shes a really hilarious broad; I call her because she is one of the last of the broads that we have. In a lot of ways, weve all got a lot invested in this and she kind of represents both the sheer terror and the very real and reasonable feeling we have of whats kind of been washing over this. But also our fight, our stick to it[-ness], our preparednessand it really does put into perspective, live your life now.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Season 17: Everything You Need to Know About the Spring Premiere - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Katherine Heigl Reveals If She Would Ever Return To Grey’s Anatomy – Nicki Swift

Katherine Heigl may have been gone fromGrey's Anatomy for over a decade, but her character Izzie Stevens is well and alive. Grey's writers brought back the original character when they wrote off Justin Chambers' character Alex Karev, who had an on-and-off relationship with her, in March 2020. In the story arc, Karev chose to relocate to Kansas and be with Stevens while raising their two kids (via The Hollywood Reporter).

While some fans were disappointed with the storyline, others were hopeful that Heigl's character being alive would mean that she'd eventually make an appearance when Grey's ends in the future an idea that Heigl isn't completely against. "I could never say never," Heigl responded when asked by The Washington Post if she'd ever return to the show that made her famous. "I think it would just be completely dependent upon the team over there, how they feel about it, and the story."

For her part, Heigl is focused on bettering herself and letting go of her bad reputation, telling The Washington Post, "I've grown into accepting that ambition is not a dirty word, and that it doesn't make me less of a feminine, loving, nurturing woman to be ambitious and have big dreams and big goals."

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Katherine Heigl Reveals If She Would Ever Return To Grey's Anatomy - Nicki Swift

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star Jesse Williams Teases Spring Premiere as ‘Pure Madness’ – PopCulture.com

The second half of Grey's Anatomy Season 17 was delayed by a week, but star Jesse Williams promises an exciting return next month. Grey's Anatomy was originally scheduled to return on March 4 but was pushed back a week to Thursday, March 11 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC. When the show last aired, Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) collapsed after seemingly getting better during her COVID-19 struggle. However, the December episode ended with Meredith's condition looking even worse than before.

"It's pure madness," Williams told Entertainment Tonight about the upcoming mid-season premiere. "I've got to say, we have found a way to have really highly concentrated, dense episodes towards the middle of the season with a lot of this incredible combination of loss and joy and progress in these characters' lives. But when [we] come back, yeah, it's going to be fairly terrifying and exhilarating." Williams stars as Dr. Jackson Avery on the show and has also appeared on Station 19 when the two shows cross over.

Each show has covered the coronavirus pandemic in its own way, with Grey's Anatomy putting it front and center during Meredith's illness. Williams said the show's handling of the pandemic has been "really cathartic" for viewers, as characters go through their own personal journeys this season. "Yes, it has value in imagining elsewhere, but theres also value [in] understanding," Williams explained, before comparing the show to the news. He noted that the series helps give names and faces to the statistics viewers see every day, even though the characters are fictional. "These are actual people that have loved ones that were born that his sister and a mom and a brother and theyre struggling with it theyre not just a stat or a demographic so thats important," Williams said.

Williams is also a "little nervous" for Meredith. During the mid-season finale, it looked like Meredith was recovering, and she even helped a patient. Unfortunately, this turned out to be a "COVID high" and she collapsed in the patient's room. The coronavirus symptoms came back quickly, and Meredith was put on a ventilator. Williams has a glimmer of hope for Meredith though. "In a lot of ways, we've all got a lot invested in this and she kind of represents both the sheer terror and the very real and reasonable feeling we have of what's kind of been washing over this," Williams told ET. "But also our fight, our 'stick to it[-ness],' our preparedness, and it really does put into perspective, live your life now."

There is also some hope that other beloved Grey's stars from the past will make appearances. In the first part of the season, Patrick Dempsey made a surprise appearance as Dr. Derek Shepherd in Meredith's dreams. T.R. Knight's George also made a cameo. Showrunner Krista Vernoff said Dempsey will be back, but refused to spoil potential appearances from Sandra Oh, Katherine Heigl, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and others. The only reason why these actors were credited for Season 17 on IMDb was a glitch, Vernoff explained to Variety.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Star Jesse Williams Teases Spring Premiere as 'Pure Madness' - PopCulture.com