Popular Culture Review Vol. 13, No. 2, Summer 2002 | Page 130

126 Popular Culture Review appeared to me as a loose jumble of separate things now seemed to come together as one presence. (260) Conclusion As artists and intellectuals facing the specter of death through the ontraction of AIDS, Monette, Michaels, and Matousek turned to memoiristic writing in an attempt to bring order and meaning to the chaos and confusion engulfing their lives. Their accounts are blunt, graphic, and harrowing, and each resonates with the human will for survival and the human need for understanding why bad things happen to good people. Monette’s memoir richly reflects various aspects of KublerRoss’ five stages of death theory, with the initial denial concerning his lover’s AIDS diagnosis turning to a searing anger over the cruel debasements that characterize the disease. No evidence of bargaining for a miracle is found in Monette’s memoir, and Monette manages to keep his depression under control in the name of trying to uplift his lover’s sagging spirits. Eventually, Monette and his afflicted partner accept the latter’s impending death, but only close to the end when the ravages of meningitis derailed all hope. Following his partner’s death, Monette felt numb and lost. Kubler-Ross notes that such a reaction is typical among those who have just lost a loved one, often leading them to recede into isolation. She adds: They not only isolate themselves from the living, but make it harder for themselves to face the reality of the person’s death....It would be cruel indeed to ridicule them or to confront them daily with the unacceptable reality. It would be more helpful to understand this need and to help them separate themselves by taking them out of their isolation gradually. (184) Meanwhile, Michaels’ memoir reflects only three stages of death cited by Kubler-Ross: anger, depression, and acceptance. His anger stems from the physical debasement of AIDS and the psychic humiliation imposed by an intolerant, homophobic society. Depression also plagues the anthropologist, with Michaels finding little hope in his chances for survival. Kubler-Ross notes that depression among the terminally ill often reflects the recognition of impending losses. With the patient in the process of losing everything and everybody he loves, depression becomes a natural stage in the dying process. Kubler-Ross notes: “What we often tend to forget.. .is the preparatory grief that the terminally ill patient has to undergo to prepare himself for his final separation from this world” (97-100). The anger and depression exhibited by Michaels eventually gave in to acceptance — an