Sharp warning បម្រាមដ៏តឹងរ៉ឹង pesticide ថ្នាំសម្លាប់សត្វល្អិត loophole ចន្លោះប្រហោង
circuitous
fashion លក្ខណៈប្រយោល sophomore និស្សិតឆ្នាំទីពីរ Sanctuary ជម្រក
songbird សត្វស្លាបដែលយំពិរោះ Succumb ស្លាប់ enmity អមិត្តភាព
spur ជំរុញ Chlordane ថ្នាំបំពុល Fete ផ្តល់កិត្តយសEspouse ប្រកាន់ភ្ជាប់ Impetus កម្លាំងជំរុញ Arena វេទិកា
Rachel Carson (1907–1964) created
quite a controversy with her widely read 1962 book, Silent Spring, which gave a
sharp warning to the public that heavy
reliance on pesticides in
agriculture could bring about a "silent spring" by destroying plant
and animal life. In the book, Carson presented information outlining the
environmental dangers inherent in
the use of pesticides and exposed legislative loopholes
that allowed widespread use of dangerous pesticides.
Carson had known from an early age
that she wanted to pursue a career in writing, but she came into the field of
scientific writing in a circuitous fashion.
She had actually published her first short story by the age of ten, and she
entered Pennsylvania College for Women at the age of seventeen with the
intention of majoring in literature and pursuing a career as a writer of
fiction. However, a biology course that she took in her sophomore year at Pennsylvania College for
Women led her in an entirely different direction; she changed her undergraduate
major from literature to biology and, after finishing her undergraduate degree,
went on to graduate work in biology at Johns Hopkins University. Upon
completing her studies, she was employed as a marine biologist for fourteen
years by the Fish and Wildlife Service of the U.S. government before she began
writing Silent Spring.
Carson came up with the idea for
Silent Spring after receiving a letter from a stranger in the state of
Massachusetts who was disturbed by the effects of pesticides on her bird sanctuary. The letter writer had noticed that,
whenever pesticide-spraying planes flew over her bird sanctuary to spray for
mosquitoes, it was not only the mosquitoes that were affected; a number of
other insects as well as bees and songbirds
also succumbed to the pesticide
spray. The fact that the state of Massachusetts was proposing even more
extensive spraying was of great concern. This letter spurred Carson to approach the New Yorker
magazine with a proposal for an article on pesticides.
Silent Spring was first published
in serial form in the New Yorker, and the series of magazine articles created
such enmity for Carson's ideas in some quarters that some who were offended by
her message tried to prevent the publication of the book and to discredit
Carson's ideas in quite a public fashion. Velsicol Corporation of Chicago
threatened to pursue a lawsuit if the book was published based on the contention that statements in Carson's
articles about Velsicol's product, chlordane,
were misleading; the book's publishers underwrote a study to independently
verify the statements that Carson had made about chlordane, the lawsuit never
came to fruition, and publication of the book went forward. Beyond the
threatened lawsuit and its attempt to prevent the publication of the book, a
number of organizations were involved in very public attempts to discredit
Carson's claims. The National Agricultural Chemicals Association created a
publication, "Fact and Fancy," to refute Carson's contentions. The
Nutrition Foundation, Inc. of New York City helped to widely disseminate a
series of negative reviews of Silent Spring. The AMA News, a publication of the
American Medical Society, suggested to its readers that they should look to
National Agricultural Chemicals Society rather than Silent Spring for accurate
information on pesticides. Carson, on her part, preferred to avoid public
debates and discussions about her ideas and let her written words speak for
themselves.
In spite of the strong negative
response to Silent Spring from those in certain quarters, there were many
positive results from the book. Rachel Carson was feted with praise and numerous awards for her book, and the
information she had presented and the ideas she had espoused in it were the impetus for numerous important changes. Among
changes attributed to Silent Spring were the establishment of both the
Environmental Protection Agency and the Environmental Defense Fund. The
Environmental Defense Fund took unprecedented legal action against the widely
used pesticide DDT, and, as a result of this new direction in the legal arena, the use of DDT was banned in 1972.
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