HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015356.jpg

1.25 MB

Extraction Summary

2
People
2
Organizations
0
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Essay / article / prose draft (house oversight production)
File Size: 1.25 MB
Summary

This document page appears to be an excerpt from an essay, article, or book draft discussing the topic of necrophilia. It references historical anecdotes involving Ralph Waldo Emerson and pop culture references to the TV show 'Homicide: Life on the Streets.' The text ends by introducing a dialogue from an internet support group called 'Necrophiliacs Anonymous.' The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Ralph Waldo Emerson Historical Figure / Subject of text
American literary figure mentioned as having dug up his wife's corpse.
Ellen Historical Figure
Deceased wife of Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Necrophiliacs Anonymous
Described as an 'Internet support group' introduced at the end of the page.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (1 events)

Historical (19th Century)
Ralph Waldo Emerson digging up the corpse of his wife, Ellen.
Cemetery

Relationships (1)

Ralph Waldo Emerson Spouse Ellen
referred to as 'his young wife, Ellen'

Key Quotes (3)

"Whether necrophilia is a victimless crime may still be open to debate."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015356.jpg
Quote #1
"It should be noted that the necrophilia community ranges from those who are monogamous and stick with one partner for a lifetime, to those who are promiscuous and hop from casket to casket."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015356.jpg
Quote #2
"Let us now eavesdrop on the dialogue of a few participants in an Internet support group, Necrophiliacs Anonymous:"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015356.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,280 characters)

Whether necrophilia is a victimless crime may still be open to debate. Nevertheless, claiming that the act was consensual will not be considered as a legal defense. It should be noted that the necrophilia community ranges from those who are monogamous and stick with one partner for a lifetime, to those who are promiscuous and hop from casket to casket.
According to his own journal entry, Ralph Waldo Emerson, one of the most revered figures in American literary history, was so devastated by the death of his young wife, Ellen, that, shortly after her burial, he went out to the cemetery one night and dug up her corpse, though he didn’t mention exactly what he did with it.
One of the most popular episodes of the police TV show, Homicide, Life On the Streets, was about the investigation of an old lonely widower, a mortician, who used to party with the corpses, setting them around a table as if they were alive. They investigated him because he shot a neighbor who knew about this practice, and then sat in the garden and waited for the cops. But again, the mortician’s relationship with those corpses may have been purely platonic.
Let us now eavesdrop on the dialogue of a few participants in an Internet support group, Necrophiliacs Anonymous:
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015356

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