Resources:Evangelion Biological Listing: Difference between revisions
(fixed formatting, removed the "pretend _ is a space") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Compiled from [[Episode 05]], [[Episode | Compiled from [[Episode 05]], [[Episode 13]], and [[Episode 14]]. (The same listing appears in Stage 22 of Sadamoto's manga, as well.) "COWPER GLAND" is the cut-off point for the observable list. | ||
{| align="center" cellpadding="10" | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" | ||
Line 178: | Line 178: | ||
<br/> COWPER GLAND | <br/> COWPER GLAND | ||
|} | |} | ||
===NOTES=== | |||
"Farandolae" are a reference to the book [[Episode 05 Supplemental Notes and Analysis|''A Wind in the Door'']]. | |||
"Prostate gland" and "Cowper gland" [sic] are both male-specific (in ''Homo sapiens''), which raises the question of whether these were intentionally included to implicate a male sex for the Evangelions, or if this is simply an artifact of how the list was compiled. That is, the male body has classically served as the "default" in anatomical texts, and the names of the two glands may have "snuck in" when the production staff prepared a list of English terms from such a book. Incidentally, the Cowper's, or bulbourethral, glands are in reality paired, but it is listed as a single entity here. | |||
[[Category:Resources]] | [[Category:Resources]] |
Revision as of 04:17, 13 March 2009
Compiled from Episode 05, Episode 13, and Episode 14. (The same listing appears in Stage 22 of Sadamoto's manga, as well.) "COWPER GLAND" is the cut-off point for the observable list.
R-EYE IRIS |
FARANDOLAE
PERSPIRATION
|
R-BICEPS
R-TRICEPS
|
AORTA
VERTEBRAE
|
L-BUTTOCK R-BUTTOCK
|
L-FEMORAL ARTERY
L-FEMORAL VEIN
|
NOTES
"Farandolae" are a reference to the book A Wind in the Door.
"Prostate gland" and "Cowper gland" [sic] are both male-specific (in Homo sapiens), which raises the question of whether these were intentionally included to implicate a male sex for the Evangelions, or if this is simply an artifact of how the list was compiled. That is, the male body has classically served as the "default" in anatomical texts, and the names of the two glands may have "snuck in" when the production staff prepared a list of English terms from such a book. Incidentally, the Cowper's, or bulbourethral, glands are in reality paired, but it is listed as a single entity here.