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Forty-three years ago, Rachel Carson became the unlikely founder of
the radical ecology movement. Her message is even more powerful today.
In 1962, a powerful group of chemical industry representatives, government
officials and salaried "experts' on the environment set out to prevent
the publication of the book of a much-loved naturalist. The naturalist in question
was Rachel Carson; the book, Silent Spring. Carson placed herself -- her reputation,
her failing health -- in the path of the juggernaut that, at the time, everyone
still blithely referred to as "progress" -- and she slowed it a little.
The narrowest of the book's objectives -- a review of the aerial spraying of
DDT over American towns, farmlands and forests -- was achieved, and government
policy on pesticides was significantly altered. Its wider objective -- to radicalize
our thinking about our relationship with the natural world -- was barely recognised.
At the same time, the storm of controversy and argument it provoked set the
tone for our environmental debates for much of the 43 years since its publication:
debates that rarely address the most fundamental principles of Carson's thinking.
For Carson, what the 20th century demanded was a new way of thinking about
the world. She demanded, not just an end to indiscriminate pesticide use, but
a new science, a new philosophy. "The 'control of nature' is a phrase conceived
in arrogance," she said at the conclusion of Silent Spring, "born
of the Neanderthal age of biology and philosophy, when it was supposed that
nature exists for the convenience of man."
This new way of thinking might now be characterized as "deep" or
"radical" ecology. Since Silent Spring, a great deal of effort has
gone into its suppression. As Jonathan Bate has pointed out, the two other radical
movements that emerged in the 1960s, feminism and anti-racism, have been tolerated:
gender and postcolonial studies are offered in most universities, for example.
Radical ecology, a philosophy that challenges all the accepted social and economic
models, lags far behind.
This is because it is a genuine threat, not just to vested interests within
the structure, but to the structure itself, for it asks us to dismantle our
most basic assumptions: about how we do business, about how we use natural "resources,"
about how we live. In 1962 Silent Spring made that threat real in a way that
took both government and big business by surprise -- and they have been trying
to avoid being caught out again ever since.
Carson did not want to write Silent Spring. True, she was painfully aware of
the indiscriminate use of pesticides, and had proposed articles on the problem
to the magazines that she was writing for, as far back as the late 1940s, but
Silent Spring was in many ways not her kind of project. In her great sea trilogy,
Under the Sea Wind, The Sea Around Us and The Edge of the Sea, a singular voice
emerges, at once rigorous and lyrical, a voice she had come to know as her own.
It was not, in so many ways, the right voice for a "crusading" book
on DDT.
By 1957, however, the pesticide problem was totally out of hand, and as an
attempt to prevent an infestation of gypsy moths in the city of New York clearly
demonstrated, "The gypsy moth," Carson wrote,
"is a forest insect, certainly not an inhabitant of cities. Nor does
it live in meadows, cultivated fields, gardens or marshes. Nevertheless, the
planes hired by the United States Department of Agriculture and the New York
Department of Agriculture and Markets showered down the prescribed DDT-in-fuel-oil
with impartiality. They sprayed gardens and dairy farms, fishponds and salt
marshes. They sprayed the quarter-acre lots of suburbia, drenching a housewife
making a desperate effort to cover her garden before the roaring plane reached
her, and showered insecticide over children at play and commuters at railway
stations. At Setauket a fine quarter horse drank from a trough in a field
which the planes had sprayed: ten hours later it was dead."
This was probably the single event that most influenced Carson to embark properly
on Silent Spring. "There would be no peace for me," she said, "if
I kept silent." Silent Spring was published in September 1962. It would
be a mistake to see it simply as a book about pesticides, though that was how
it was quickly characterized by its opponents, who wanted to portray Carson
as anti-chemicals and hence anti-progress.
In fact, some of Carson's best writing goes into the book, as she carries her
readers along with the argument. Most of all, she wanted people to see the background
to the problem with DDT. Carson is a careful guide through the complex web of
political and fiscal shenanigans, explaining to a public that would have known
almost nothing about biological as opposed to chemical pest control, exactly
how government and other bodies manipulated the figures to make the biological
option always seem "too expensive."
In this alone Silent Spring is a towering achievement: Carson makes the necessary
case against DDT, but on the way, she exposes the entire system. As Paul Brookes
notes, in his excellent study of her work, The House of Life, "She was
questioning not only the indiscriminate use of poisons but the basic irresponsibility
of an industrialised, technological society toward the natural world."
The response from that society was not long in coming. Soon the men in gray
were creeping out from behind their reports and balance sheets, ready to attack.
Every effort was made to suppress or vilify the book, not only by chemical companies
such as Monsanto and the National Agricultural Chemicals Association, but also
by government departments, the Nutrition Foundation and even baby-food producers.
It made no difference. Carson was well prepared for the attacks; and not only
would she not be intimidated, she even refused to go out of her way to defend
her position, saying that the book could look after itself.
Meanwhile, the public, and most of the popular press, loved Silent Spring.
It became a best seller, a talking point in factories and drawing rooms, the
subject of hundreds of newspaper articles, parodies, cartoons and debates. More
importantly it reached the office of John F. Kennedy, who asked his scientific
advisor to begin a study into the whole DDT question. A pesticides committee
was set up, and it quickly produced a report criticising the chemical companies
and endorsing Carson's views. Something had been achieved.
But only a little. Testifying to that same committee in June 1963 Carson took
the opportunity to remind the world of the wider implications of her work: "We
still talk in terms of conquest. We still haven't become mature enough to think
of ourselves as only a tiny part of a vast and incredible universe. Man's attitude
towards nature is today critically important simply because we have now acquired
a fateful power to destroy nature. But man is part of nature and his war against
nature is inevitably a war against himself."
It is over 40 years since that statement. Spring has become a little more silent
with each passing year. The skylarks and warblers that used to be so plentiful
in our countryside are vanishing, especially on those big, "profitable"
farms the government seems to favor.
Part of the reason for this lamentable situation is that business and government
have succeeded in keeping us all in two minds about ecology as a workable philosophy
for daily life. The most calculated criticisms of Carson made in the wake of
Silent Spring were that she was mystical or sentimental -- and somehow that
view of philosophical ecology has stuck.
Yet mystical and sentimental is exactly what ecology is not: those honors belong
to the old religions of market values and objectivity. If Carson were alive
today, she would be emphasizing our need to understand how central the philosophy
of ecology is to our lives. What she wanted to show us was that matter is continuous,
like a Celtic knot. This continuum, she believed, was the one single narrative
that includes all others.
You cannot pollute water locally. All waters come together, as all life does:
"Individual elements are lost to view, only to reappear again and again
in different incarnations in a kind of material immortality. Kindred forces
to those which, in some period inconceivably remote, gave birth to that primal
piece of protoplasm tossing on the ancient seas, continue their mighty and
incomprehensible work. Against this cosmic background the lifespan of a particular
plant or animal appears, not as a drama complete in itself, but only as a
brief interlude in a panorama of endless change."
It is a call to a new way of thinking, a challenge to us all to create, and
live by, a radical philosophy of life.