Rachel Carson's Silent SpringFrom the final decades of the eighteenth century to the present day, a relatively few social and political documents have been written and circulated, then have gone on to change the course of human history. The Manifesto Series surveys some of those documents, presents an account of each manifestoï¿1/2s immediate impact, then explains how and why its influence spread to a wider audience. Brief and concisely written, each title in this series makes engrossing reading and provides readers with insights into the dynamics of modern history. Each title in this series is enhanced with approximately 70 color illustrations. Lengthy excerpts from Rachel Carsonï¿1/2s compelling Silent Spring are presented in this book, with extensive commentary and analysis. Carsonï¿1/2s book, published in the 1960s, exposed the hazards inflicted on the earthï¿1/2s environment by powerful industrial concerns. Her book focused especially on the harmful effects of DDT, while on a broader level it also questioned the domination of our culture by modern technology. Silent Spring thus became a springboard for a multitude of environmental movements and reforms which, to the present day, influence all of our lives for the better. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 9
Page 44
... songbirds , shellfish , and even a horse . In Chapter 11 , " Beyond the Dreams of the Borgias , " readers move from the natural world to the kitchen . Here , Carson presents two particularly electrifying facts : Every restaurant meal ...
... songbirds , shellfish , and even a horse . In Chapter 11 , " Beyond the Dreams of the Borgias , " readers move from the natural world to the kitchen . Here , Carson presents two particularly electrifying facts : Every restaurant meal ...
Page 49
... songbirds - especially the cherished robin . " To millions of Americans , " observed Carson , " the season's first robin means that the grip of winter is broken . Its coming is an event reported in newspapers and told eagerly at the ...
... songbirds - especially the cherished robin . " To millions of Americans , " observed Carson , " the season's first robin means that the grip of winter is broken . Its coming is an event reported in newspapers and told eagerly at the ...
Page 72
... songbirds and game birds whose preservation is encouraged by another agency . " Even so , it is remarkable that , in mid - 1962 , despite being embroiled in the Cold War , the president found the time to ask the President's Science ...
... songbirds and game birds whose preservation is encouraged by another agency . " Even so , it is remarkable that , in mid - 1962 , despite being embroiled in the Cold War , the president found the time to ask the President's Science ...
Common terms and phrases
activist aerial spraying agricultural Al Gore Audubon Society bald eagle banned best-selling biological birds Brower campaign cancer Carson's death CARSON'S SILENT SPRING chemical companies chemical industry chemical pesticides chemists citizens Colborn conservation contaminated countries cranberries critical crusading book David David Bollier DDT's developed disease E.B. White eagle early Earth Day ecologist ecology environment environmental movement environmentalists Fable for Tomorrow fish forests green herbicides Houghton Mifflin human health impact insecticides insects John Kennedy malaria MANIFESTO RACHEL CARSON'S million acres modern environmental movement mosquitoes Muir Müller naturalist nature Nixon Nobel nuclear numbers ordinary Americans organic Paul Brooks percent perfect pesticide persistent pest control pesticide industry pesticides poisoning pollution popular problems published Rachel Carson RACHEL CARSON'S SILENT Ralph Nader robin Ruckelshaus scientific scientists Sierra Club Silent Spring songbirds species Steingraber Stolen Future synthetic testing Theo Colborn toxic United White-Stevens wildlife wrote Yorker