Not many things are constant in life, but one thing that will always remain the same is that everything is forever moving, changing, and passing. My introduction to this concept came at age 11 when my father passed away. I couldn’t help but think why this happened and why couldn’t I stop it from happening? Unfortunately, death is an event that we will never be able to fully understand, but we can sure try. In efforts to shed some light on the subject the “Museum of Death” founded June, 1995, and located on Hollywood Blvd, is a self guided walking tour exploring death and its many forms. The museum houses anything relating to death from body bags to taxidermy. I took great interest in its emphasis on serial killers, specifically Ed Gein. Although others surely exceeded his body count, Gein is thought to be one of Americas most famous killers. Characterized as a transvestite grave robber, Gein’s mental aberration, “sexual deviance”, and use of the body parts of his victims shocked the nation. Though his name is rarely heard the legacy of his crimes thrive as being the inspiration for Hollywood blockbusters such as “Psycho”, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”, “Silence of the Lambs”, and countless more.
In the informative nonfiction story “Do Mummies Belong In Museums” by Mary Kate Frank. We read about reasons that mummies belong and do not belong in museums. I think mummies should be displayed in museums because they draw attention, show history, and teach researchers a lot. We know that mummies draw attention. This matters because people want to look at some mummies that will really factice them.
Notorious serial killers are often talked about years after their crimes were committed. The names most frequently mentioned are Jeffrey Dahmer, Charles Manson, Ted Bundy, and John Wayne Gacy; but let us not forget the Grandfather of Gore, Edward Theodore Gein. His story caught the attention of American authors, screenwriters, and horror fanatics everywhere. Gein’s isolated childhood, overwhelming love for his mother, and the direction she sent him in lead to a spiraling psychotic breakdown. This man and his horrors are the inspiration behind the chilling characters Leatherface in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Norman Bates in Psycho.
Nolan Balk Mrs. Neuberger Composition II 9 March 2023 Jeffrey Dahmer’s Serial Killer Portfolio According to BuzzFeed, the average American will encounter sixteen murderers in their lifetime (Kopsky). Many murderers hide in plain sight; they could be friends, neighbors, or even a local bartender. Homicides are discovered each day in the United States, but the question remains, “Was this the act of a serial killer?”
Rhiannon Thornhill Mr. Gravett ENG 102 17 May 2018 Dahmer’s Cadavers Jeffrey Dahmer has gone down in history as one of the most infamous serial murderers of our time. Even from childhood, Dahmer had always stayed away from the busyness of the crowd. As a young child, Dahmer had trouble making friends; he was fascinated with the flesh of living things, he even had an interest in taxidermy. During high school, he alienated himself from the rest of his peers and was incredibly shy around female students. This growing obsession with death led Dahmer to the path of destruction.
Krystal Gaines Mrs. Emily Allee Advanced Composition 19 March 2023 Jeffrey Dahmer: Is having a show really necessary? We’ve all been there, sitting on the couch scrolling through Netflix. You ponder through what seems like an endless amount of shows and movies when you suddenly get to the murder section. All that can be seen is a row of documentaries and shows about numerous serial killers, which all seem to be popular right now.
Carson Hays Mrs.Dixon Criminal justice III 23 october 2017 Richard Kuklinski Throughout this year we have studied many different types of serial killers, but under no circumstance is Richard Kuklinski like any other serial killer we have studied. Richard Kuklinski was a stone cold killer and nothing would stop him from completing his objective of murdering his target. Serial killers that we have studied had many different categories that they fell under disorganized, organized, power control, etc… But with Richard you never knew the certain way he was going to kill his victims. Like most of the serial killers we’ve studied they have had a troubled upbringing and so did Richard kuklinski.
Kennedy Palmer Ms.Stubenrauch Psychology, period 3 December 7, 201 Ed Gein Ed Gein -a serial killer known for exhuming corpses and his gruesome murders- was lead to a dark and violent lifestyle. The key factors that lead to his violent lifestyle were having an abusive, alcoholic father, being forced to believe all women were prostitutes (meaning sex was bad unless it was to have children), and being isolated from everything starting at a young age. From a young age, he developed a close bond with his mother. However, his bond soon became an obsession.
Gein eventually got the police’s attention in 1957, when a local hardware store owner, 58-year-old Bernice Worden, disappeared while working at her store. The police eventually tracked him down later that evening, and another officer entered his house and found a gruesome scene. When the officer arrived, he found Bernice’s decapitated, eviscerated, and mutilated body strung up by its heels. When searching the gory house of horrors, the police found these articles: human skulls mounted on his bed human skin fashioned into a lampshade human skin used to upholster chair seats a human heart the head of Mary Hogan (a local tavern owner that went missing in 1954)
Ever since the early 18th century with the cases of the “wild beast” many cases have come and gone but some have gained popularity in the talks of society. Such as the Edward Theodore case in 1957. Edward Theodore Gein was born on August 27, 1906, in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Growing up Gein was devoted to his mother until she died in 1945, and he then became increasingly deranged and started to go to cemeteries to unbury recently buried female corpses. As soon as he unburied the female he would cut off body parts and keep them as trophies, then put the rest of the corpse making it seem as if he never dug it up.
Whether it is the journey of the soul, judgment and rebirth, or the promise of eternal life, the afterlife offers a sense of continuity and purpose beyond physical existence. Through the stories and traditions of these mythologies, we gain insight into the human experience of grappling with mortality and unknown mysteries. Finally, the afterlife reminds us that death is not the end, but a transition to a new phase of existence. As author Raymond Moody once said, "Death—the last sleep? No, it's the last awakening.
In this paper I will be applying the psychological theories to serial killer Ed Gein. Ed Gein was a prolific serial killer in the 1950’s. He murdered and robbed graves for body parts to make furniture and clothing. He was apprehended in 1957, where he stood trial and was institutionalized. Edward Theodore “Ed” Gein was born August 27th, 1906 to George and Augusta Gein.
Every human faces the inevitability of death. No matter who they are, or what they do, death will eventually come to claim them. So much of Earth’s history contains death. Whether speaking on the subject of Genghis Khan, who was responsible for decreasing the world population by killing hundreds of thousands of people, the death of an empire, when the great Roman empire met its demise, or death brought on by disease, like the bubonic plague, death has made a name for itself throughout the millions of years on Earth. Today’s modern America is very different from the old one.
Mortality, while mostly known as a rate for people, is a theme well shown between many different stories. Mortality is something everyone experiences sometime in their life, whether that mortality be on them or on a close person to them. This causes people to react differently to what is happening, some may be rational, others may be irrational. Within these stories there are ways that the people that come face to face with death react, some may be calm, others terrified. We find the people that cause this to happen do this for some reason that allows for them to have a personal gain in their lives.
When you hear the word death or you hear that someone has died today in the news or on the television I know a lot of people think “Man, I feel sorry for the family that they have to go through that.” or they thank god that it was not them or their family members.” Sadly though people try to push away death and push away the fact that everyone dies at one point in time. This is even truer when they witness their own family member in the hospital with a critical condition that the doctors cannot fix even with modern medicines on the doctor’s side. Another such time would be when a person’s family member is diagnosed with an incurable sickness that is fatal.
Ed Gein was an infamous American serial killer who was born in Wisconsin, on August 27th, 1906. Ed Gein grew up with his eldest brother Henry and violent alcoholic father, George P. Gein, with whom he never had a relationship with, in a house that was dictated by his enthusiastically religious mother, Augusta Crafter, and her sermons of sin, Augusta passed on her notion to her children, that all women aside from herself were whores. Gein’s mother ran their humble family business and later on bought a farm on the border of a small town to avoid strangers influencing her two sons. The only time Ed was ever given permission to leave his home was to go to school, where he was preyed on by bullies. Gein’s father passed away in 1940, and his brother in 1944, after a fire that Ed had also been caught in, where he had experienced a head