Silent Spring

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About the Author

Rachel Carson (1907–1964) spent most of her professional life as a marine biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. By the late 1950s, she had written three lyrical, popular books about the sea, including the best- selling The Sea Around Us, and had become the Bee Plumber 76: most respected science writer in America. She completed Silent Spring against formidable personal odds, and with it shaped a powerful social movement that has altered the course of history.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Introduction
by Linda Lear

Headlines in the New York Times in July 1962 captured the national
sentiment: “Silent Spring is now noisy summer.” In the few months between
the New Yorker”s serialization of Silent Spring in June and its publication in
book form that September, Rachel Carson”s alarm touched off a national
debate on the use of chemical pesticides, the responsibility of science, and
the limits of technological progress. When Carson died barely eighteen
months later in the spring of 1964, at the age of fifty-six, she had set in
motion a course of events that would result in a ban on the domestic
production of DDT and the creation of a grass-roots movement demanding
protection of the environment through state and federal regulation. Carson”s
writing initiated a transformation in the relationship between humans and the
natural world and stirred an awakening of public environmental
consciousness.
It is hard to remember the cultural climate that greeted Silent
Spring and to understand the fury that was launched against its quietly
determined author. Carson”s thesis that we were subjecting ourselves to slow
poisoning by the misuse of chemical pesticides that polluted the environment
may seem like common currency now, but in 1962 Silent Spring contained
the kernel of social revolution. Carson wrote at a time of new affluence and
intense social conformity. The cold war, with its climate of
suspicion and intolerance, was at its zenith. The chemical industry, one of
the chief beneficiaries of postwar technology, was also one of the chief
authors of the nation”s prosperity. DDT enabled the conquest of insect pests
in agriculture and of ancient insect-borne disease just as surely as the
atomic bomb destroyed America”s military enemies and dramatically altered
the balance of power between humans and nature. The public endowed
chemists, at work in their starched white coats in remote laboratories, with
almost divine wisdom. The results of their labors were gilded with the
presumption of
beneficence. In postwar America, science was god, and science was male.
Carson was an outsider who had never been part of the scientific
establishment, first because she was a woman but also because her chosen
field, biology, was held in low esteem in the nuclear age. Her career path was
nontraditional; she had no academic affiliation, no institutional voice. She
deliberately wrote for the public rather than for a narrow scientific audience.
For anyone else, such independence would have been an enormous
detriment. But by the time Silent Spring was published, Carson”s outsider
status had become a distinct advantage. As the science establishment
would discover, it was impossible to dismiss her.

Rachel Carson first discovered nature in the company of her mother, a
devotee of the nature study movement. She wandered the banks of the
Allegheny River in the pristine village of Springdale, Pennsylvania, just north
of Pittsburgh, observing the wildlife and plants around her and particularly
curious about the habits of birds.
Her childhood, though isolated by poverty and family turmoil, was
not lonely. She loved to read and displayed an obvious talent for writing,
publishing her first story in a children”s literary magazine at the age of ten.
By the time she entered Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham
College), she had read widely in the English Romantic tradition and had
articulated a personal sense of mission, her “vision splendid.” A dynamic
female zoology professor expanded her intellectual horizons by urging her to
take the daring step of majoring in biology rather than English. In doing so,
Carson discovered that science not only engaged her mind but gave
her “something to write about.” She decided to pursue a career in science,
aware that in the 1930s there were few opportunities for women.
Scholarships allowed her to study at Woods Hole Biological
Laboratory, where she fell in love with the sea, and at Johns Hopkins
University, where she was isolated, one of a handful of women in marine
biology. She had no mentors and no money to continue in graduate school
after completing an M.A. in zoology in 1932. Along the way she worked as a
laboratory assistant in the school of public health, where she was lucky
enough to receive some training in experimental genetics. As employment
opportunities in science dwindled, she began writing articles about the
natural history of Chesapeake
Bay for the Baltimore Sun. Although these were years of financial and
emotional struggle, Carson realized that she did not have to choose between
science and writing, that she had the talent to do both.
From childhood on, Carson was interested in the long history of
the earth, in its patterns and rhythms, its ancient seas, its evolving life forms.
She was an ecologist—fascinated by intersections and connections but
always aware of the whole—before that perspective was accorded scholarly
legitimacy. A fossil shell she found while digging in the hills above the
Allegheny as a little girl prompted questions about the creatures of the
oceans that had once covered the area. At Johns Hopkins, an experiment
with changes in the salinity of water in an eel tank prompted her to study the
life cycle of those ancient fish that migrate from continental rivers to the
Sargasso Sea. The desire to understand the sea from a nonhuman
perspective led to her first book, Under the Sea-Wind, which featured a
common sea bird, the sanderling, whose life cycle, driven by ancestral
instincts, the rhythms of the tides, and the search for food, involves an
arduous journey from Patagonia to the Arctic Circle. From the outset Carson
acknowledged her “kinship with other forms of life” and always wrote to
impress that relationship on her readers.
Carson was confronted with the problem of environmental pollution
at a formative period in her life. During her adolescence the second wave of
the industrial revolution was turning the Pittsburgh area into the iron and steel
capital of the Western world. The little town of Springdale, sandwiched
between two huge coal-.red electric plants, was transformed into a grimy
wasteland, its air fouled by chemical emissions, its river polluted by industrial
waste. Carson could not wait to escape. She observed that the captains of
industry took no notice of the defilement of her hometown and no
responsibility for it. The experience made her forever suspicious of promises
of “better living through chemistry” and of claims that technology would create
a progressively brighter future.
In 1936 Carson landed a job as a part-time writer of radio scripts
on ocean life for the federal Bureau of Fisheries in Baltimore. By night she
wrote freelance articles for the Sun describing the pollution of the oyster beds
of the Chesapeake by industrial runoff; she urged changes in oyster seeding
and dredging practices and political regulation of the effluents pouring into the
bay. She signed her articles “R. L. Carson,” hoping that readers would
assume that the writer was male and thus take her science seriously.
A year later Carson became a junior aquatic biologist for the
Bureau of Fisheries, one of only two professional women there, and began a
slow but steady advance through the ranks of the agency, which became the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1939. Her literary talents were quickly
recognized, and she was assigned to edit other scientists” field reports, a
task she turned into an opportunity to broaden her scientific knowledge,
deepen her connection with nature, and observe the making of science
policy. By 1949 Carson was editor in chief of all the agency”s publications,
writing her own distinguished series on the new U.S wildlife refuge system
and participating in interagency conferences on the latest developments in
science and technology.
Her government responsibilities slowed the pace of her own
writing. It took her ten years to synthesize the latest research on
oceanography, but her perseverance paid off. She became an overnight
literary celebrity when The Sea Around Us was first serialized in The New
Yorker in 1951. The book won many awards, including the National Book
Award for nonfiction, and Carson was elected to the American Academy of
Arts and Letters. She was lauded not only for her scientific expertise and
synthesis of wide-ranging material but also for her lyrical, poetic voice. The
Sea Around Us and its best-
selling successor, The Edge of the Sea, made Rachel Carson the foremost
science writer in America. She understood that there was a deep need for
writers who could report on and interpret the natural world. Readers around
the world found comfort in her clear explanations of complex science, her
description of the creation of the seas, and her obvious love of the wonders of
nature. Hers was a trusted voice in a world riddled by uncertainty.
Whenever she spoke in public, however, she took notice of
ominous new trends. “Intoxicated with a sense of his own power,” she
wrote, “[mankind] seems to be going farther and farther into more
experiments for the destruction of himself and his world.” Technology, she
feared, was moving on a faster trajectory than mankind”s sense of moral
responsibility. In 1945 she tried to interest Reader”s Digest in the alarming
evidence of environmental damage from the widespread use of the new
synthetic chemical DDT and other long-lasting agricultural pesticides. By
1957 Carson believed that these chemicals were potentially harmful to the
long-term health of the whole biota. The pollution of the environment by the
profligate use of toxic chemicals was the ultimate act of human hubris, a
product of ignorance and greed that she felt compelled to bear witness
against. She insisted that what science conceived and technology made
possible must first be judged for its safety and benefit to the “whole stream of
life.” “There would be no peace for me, she wrote to a friend, “if I kept silent.”

Silent Spring, the product of her unrest, deliberately challenged the wisdom
of a government that allowed toxic chemicals to be put into the environment
before knowing the long-term consequences of their use. Writing in language
that everyone could understand and cleverly using the public”s knowledge of
atomic fallout as a reference point, Carson described how chlorinated
hydrocarbons and organic phosphorus insecticides altered the cellular
processes of plants, animals, and, by implication, humans.
Science and technology, she charged, had become the handmaidens of the
chemical industry”s rush for profits and control of markets. Rather than
protecting the public from potential harm, the government not only gave its
approval to these new products but did so without establishing any
mechanism of accountability. Carson questioned the moral right of
government to leave its citizens unprotected from substances they could
neither physically avoid nor publicly question. Such callous arrogance could
end only in the destruction of the living world. “Can anyone believe it is
possible to lay down such a barrage of poisons on the surface of the earth
without making it unfit for all life?” she asked. “They should not be
called “insecticides” but “biocides.””
In Silent Spring, and later in testimony before a congressional
committee, Carson asserted that one of the most basic human rights must
surely be the “right of the citizen to be secure in his own home against the
intrusion of poisons applied by other persons.” Through ignorance, greed, and
negligence, government had allowed “poisonous and biologically potent
chemicals” to fall “indiscriminately into the hands of persons largely or wholly
ignorant of their potentials for harm.” When the public protested, it was “fed
little tranquillizing pills of half-truth” by a government that refused to take
responsibility for or acknowledge evidence of damage. Carson challenged
such moral vacuity. “The obligation to endure,” she wrote, “gives us the right
to know.”
In Carson”s view, the postwar culture of science that arrogantly
claimed dominion over nature was the philosophic root of the problem.
Human beings, she insisted, were not in control of nature but simply one of
its parts: the survival of one part depended upon the health of all. She
protested the “contamination of man”s total environment” with substances
that accumulate in the tissues of plants, animals, and humans and have the
potential to alter the genetic structure of organisms.
Carson argued that the human body was permeable and, as such,
vulnerable to toxic substances in the environment. Levels of exposure could
not be controlled, and scientists could not accurately predict the long-term
effects of bioaccumulation in the cells or the impact of such a mixture of
chemicals on human health. She categorically rejected the notion proposed
by industry that there were human “thresholds” for such poisons, as well as
its corollary, that the human body had “assimilative capacities” that rendered
the poisons harmless. In one of the most controversial parts of her book,
Carson presented evidence that some human cancers were linked to
pesticide exposure. That evidence and its subsequent elaboration by many
other researchers continue to fuel one of the most challenging and
acrimonious debates within the scientific and environmental communities.
Carson”s concept of the ecology of the human body was a major
departure in our thinking about the relationship between humans and the
natural environment. It had enormous consequences for our understanding of
human health as well as our attitudes toward environmental risk. Silent
Spring proved that our bodies are not boundaries. Chemical corruption of the
globe affects us from conception to death. Like the rest of nature, we are
vulnerable to pesticides; we too are permeable. All forms of life are more alike
than different.
Carson believed that human health would ultimately reflect the
environment”s ills. Inevitably this idea has changed our response to nature, to
science, and to the technologies that devise and deliver contamination.
Although the scientific community has been slow to acknowledge this aspect
of Carson”s work, her concept of the ecology of the human body may well
prove to be one of her most lasting contributions.
In 1962, however, the multimillion-dollar industrial chemical
industry was not about to allow a former government editor, a female scientist
without a Ph.D. or an institutional affiliation, known only for her lyrical books
on the sea, to undermine public confidence in its products or to question its
integrity. It was clear to the industry that Rachel Carson was a hysterical
woman whose alarming view of the future could be ignored or, if necessary,
suppressed. She was a “bird and bunny lover,” a woman who kept cats and
was therefore clearly suspect. She was a romantic “spinster” who was simply
overwrought about genetics. In short, Carson was a woman out of control.
She had overstepped the bounds of her gender and her science. But just in
case her claims did gain an audience, the industry spent a quarter of a
million dollars to discredit her research and malign her character. In the end,
the worst they could say was that she had told only one side of the story and
had based her argument on unverifiable case studies.
There is another, private side to the controversy over Silent Spring.
Unbeknown to her detractors in government and industry, Carson was fighting
a far more powerful enemy than corporate outrage: a rapidly metastasizing
breast cancer. The miracle is that she lived to complete the book at all,
enduring a “catalogue of illnesses,” as she called it. She was immune to the
chemical industry”s efforts to malign her; rather, her energies were focused
on the challenge of survival in order to bear witness to the truth as she saw it.
She intended to disturb and disrupt, and she did so with dignity and
deliberation.
After Silent Spring caught the attention of President John F.
Kennedy, federal and state investigations were launched into the validity of
Carson”s claims. Communities that had been subjected to aerial spraying of
pesticides against their wishes began to organize on a grass-roots level
against the continuation of toxic pollution. Legislation was readied at all
governmental levels to defend against a new kind of invisible fallout. The
scientists who had claimed a “holy grail” of knowledge were forced to admit a
vast ignorance. While Carson knew that one book could not alter the
dynamic of the capitalist system, an environmental movement grew from her
challenge, led by a public that demanded that science and government be
held accountable. Carson remains an example of what one committed
individual can do to change the direction of society. She was a revolutionary
spokesperson for the rights of all life. She dared to speak out and confront
the issue of the destruction of nature and to frame it as a debate over the
quality of all life.
Rachel Carson knew before she died that her work had made a
difference. She was honored by medals and awards, and posthumously
received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1981. But she also knew that
the issues she had raised would not be solved quickly or easily and that
affluent societies are slow to sacrifice for the good of the whole. It was not
until six years after Carson”s death that concerned Americans celebrated the
first Earth Day and that Congress passed the National Environmental Policy
Act establishing the Environmental Protection Agency as a buffer against our
own handiwork. The domestic production of DDT was banned, but not its
export, ensuring that the pollution of the earth”s atmosphere, oceans,
streams, and wildlife would continue unabated. DDT is found in the livers of
birds and fish on every oceanic island on the planet and in the breast milk of
every mother. In spite of decades of environmental protest and awareness,
and in spite of Rachel Carson”s apocalyptic call alerting Americans to the
problem of toxic chemicals, reduction of the use of pesticides has been one
of the major policy failures of the environmental era. Global contamination is
a fact of modern life.
Silent Spring compels each generation to reevaluate its
relationship to the natural world. We are a nation still debating the questions
it raised, still unresolved as to how to act for the common good, how to
achieve environmental justice. In arguing that public health and the
environment, human and natural, are inseparable, Rachel Carson insisted
that the role of the expert had to be limited by democratic access and must
include public debate about the risks of hazardous technologies. She knew
then, as we have learned since, that scientific evidence by its very nature is
incomplete and scientists will inevitably disagree on what constitutes certain
proof of harm. It is difficult to make public policy in such cases when
government”s obligation to protect is mitigated by the nature of science itself.
Rachel Carson left us a legacy that not only embraces the future
of life, in which she believed so fervently, but sustains the human spirit. She
confronted us with the chemical corruption of the globe and called on us to
regulate our appetites—a truly revolutionary stance—for our self-
preservation. “It seems reasonable to believe,” she wrote, “that the more
clearly we can focus our attention on the wonders and realities of the
universe about us, the less taste we shall have for the destruction of our race.
Wonder and humility are wholesome emotions, and they do not exist side by
side with a lust for destruction.”
Wonder and humility are just some of the gifts of Silent Spring.
They remind us that we, like all other living creatures, are part of the vast
ecosystems of the earth, part of the whole stream of life. This is a book to
relish: not for the dark side of human nature, but for the promise of life”s
possibility.

Copyright © 1962 by Rachel L. Carson
Copyright © renewed 1990 by Roger Christie
Introduction copyright © 2002 by Linda Lear
Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company.

First published by Houghton Mifflin in 1962, Silent Spring alerted a large audience to the environmental and human dangers of indiscriminate use of pesticides, spurring revolutionary changes in the laws affecting our air, land, and water. “Silent Spring became a runaway bestseller, with international reverberations . . . [It is] well crafted, fearless and succinct . . . Even if she had not inspired a generation of activists, Carson would prevail as one of the greatest nature writers in American letters” (Peter Matthiessen, for Time”s 100 Most Influential People of the Century). This fortieth anniversary edition celebrates Rachel Carson”s watershed book with a new introduction by the author and activist Terry Tempest Williams and a new afterword by the acclaimed Rachel Carson biographer Linda Lear, who tells the story of Carson”s courageous defense of her truths in the face of ruthless assault from the chemical industry in the year following the publication of Silent Spring and before her untimely death in 1964.

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