The Ecology Book

(Elliott) #1

244


A


rguably the most revered
and influential book ever
published on the subject
of environmentalism, Silent Spring
garnered a huge amount of
publicity when it was released in


  1. It galvanized the fledgling
    conservation movement, forced
    legislative change, and, perhaps
    most significantly, championed the
    right of the public to question those
    in power and hold them to account.
    However, the author of this
    ground-breaking work was far from
    the typical “eco-warrior”—a term
    that was unheard of when the book
    was first published. On the
    contrary, Rachel Carson was a
    quiet, scholarly woman, with
    a masters degree in zoology and
    20 years’ service as an aquatic
    biologist in the United States. Most
    of all, she was an exceptional
    writer, able to fuse scientific fact
    with compelling narrative.


Dying wildlife
Like many great and influential
works, Silent Spring began in a very
personal way. In January 1958,
Carson’s friend Olga Huckins sent
her a letter that she had originally
tried to have published in the

Boston Herald. It spoke about aerial
spraying of a mixture of fuel oil and
a chemical compound named DDT
(dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane),
in the vicinity of her small bird
sanctuary in Michigan. The
morning after the spraying,
Huckins found several birds dead
on her property and hoped that
Carson might know someone in
Washington who could stop further
spraying. Carson was outraged and
resolved to help. For more than a
decade she had been aware of
troubling incidents in which

Rachel Carson Born in 1907, Rachel Carson grew
up on a farm in Pennsylvania,
where she developed a love of
nature. She won a scholarship to
Pennsylvania College for Women
and later gained a masters in
zoology. Growing up in a land-
locked state, Carson dreamed of
the ocean; it became an enduring
passion, and she went to work as
an aquatic biologist with the US
Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS).
Carson wrote and published
many educational brochures and
eventually became the US Fish
and Wildlife Service’s editor-in-
chief. From 1941 onward, she

wrote books about marine
biology, most notably The Sea
Around Us, which won the
National Book Award, and was a
national best seller. This success
enabled Carson to write full
time and she began work on
Silent Spring in 1958. In 1960,
Carson was diagnosed with
breast cancer; she died in 1964.

THE LEGACY OF PESTICIDES


Spraying insecticide such as
DDT whether indoors or outside, has
been—and in some places still is—a
common method of controlling the
mosquitoes that transmit malaria.

IN CONTEXT


KEY FIGURE
Rachel Carson (1907– 64)

BEFORE
1854 Henry David Thoreau’s
book Walden describes a social
experiment to live the simple
life in tune with nature. It is
seen as an inspiration for the
environmentalist movement.

1949 A Sand County Almanac
by Aldo Leopold proposes a
deep ecology of people living
in harmony with the land.

AFTER
1970 The US establishes
the Environmental Protection
Agenc y ( E PA).

1989 Bill McKibben’s book
The End of Nature highlights
the dangers of global warming.

2006 The documentary An
Inconvenient Truth records
former US vice president Al
Gore’s efforts to educate the
public about climate change.

Key works

1941 Under the Sea Wind
1951 The Sea Around Us
1955 The Edge of the Sea
1962 Silent Spring

US_242-247_Pesticides.indd 244 12/11/18 6:25 PM

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