首页
登录
职称英语
When my predecessors at Time reviewed ecologist Rachel Carson’s book Silent
When my predecessors at Time reviewed ecologist Rachel Carson’s book Silent
游客
2025-01-12
28
管理
问题
When my predecessors at Time reviewed ecologist Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring 50 years ago this month, they were less than impressed. While the piece praised her graceful writing style, it argued that Carson’s "emotional and inaccurate outburst" was "hysterically overemphatic," which I believe is a fancy way of saying that the lady writer let her feelings get the best of her.
Time’s take was gentle compared with the reactions of some of her other contemporary critics. As William Souder writes in his new biography of Carson, On a Farther Shore, chemical companies threatened her with lawsuits after she argued that pesticide overuse was ruining the environment and threatening human health. Others insinuated that she was in league with communists who wanted to cripple American agriculture. As a former chemical-industry spokesman put it bluntly, "If man were to follow the teachings of Miss Carson, we would return to the Dark Ages, and the insects and diseases and vermin would once again inherit the earth. "
Today Silent Spring is regarded as a masterpiece, one of the most influential books of the 20th century. The criticism of Carson—and the sexism implicit in much of it—is a relic from an age devoted to better living through chemistry. Yet 50 years after its publication and 48 years after Carson’s untimely death from breast cancer, there’s still a small but vibrant industry in attacking Silent Spring and its author.
The claim now is that her polemic against pesticides led the world to phase out the insecticide dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, or DDT. That might seem like a good thing. In Silent Spring Carson describes the toxic effects of DDT use on animals, particularly birds, and in 1972 the Environmental Protection Agency banned it partly on the grounds that it was a probable human carcinogen. So long-lived and potent is DDT that even now, 40 years after the ban, most Americans still carry traces of the chemical in their bodies.
But DDT was also effective in killing the mosquitoes that carry malaria. Conservative critics have argued that by turning the world against DDT, Carson crippled efforts to fight the deadly disease in Africa, where it kills hundreds of thousands of people a year. The right-wing Conservative Enterprise Institute maintains a website called RachelWasWrong. org, arguing that Carson’s "extreme rhetoric generated a culture of fear, resulting in policies that have deprived many people access to life-saving chemicals," namely DDT. In 2005, British politician Dick Taverne wrote that "the anti-DDT campaign that she inspired was responsible for almost as many deaths as some of the worst dictators of the last century. "
The Godwinning of Carson ignores a few facts. Carson took pains to make it clear that she wasn’t calling for the banning of all pesticides, especially those that might be able to protect human beings against insect-transmitted diseases. Carson simply wanted to bring some balance to the use of powerful chemicals at a time when ecology was barely considered a science and industry had license to do whatever it wanted in the name of progress. As for DDT, many experts believe the pesticide would have been less effective against malaria-carrying mosquitoes in the scattered and remote villages of sub-Saharan Africa than it was in more densely populated North America. Africa’ s staggering malaria death toll has more to do with decades of Western indifference than it does with a single book.
If Silent Spring gave birth to the modern green movement, the critical reaction to it created the blueprint for how industry defends itself against environmentalism. Whether it’ s pesticides, asbestos or air pollution, the battle plan is the same: question the science, attack the scientists’ credibility and warn of unbearable costs. The plan hasn’t worked: the U. S. has become cleaner and healthier since Silent Spring, and the Dark Ages that serious men warned us about have yet to descend. But the fight is far from over, as the polarized debate over climate change demonstrates. Rachel Carson may have prophesied a silent spring, but the battle between her acolytes and her enemies will be long and loud. [br] The author uses the expression "a small but vibrant industry"(para. 3)to refer to______.
选项
A、the opponents from the chemical industry
B、the industrialists who were devoted to better living through chemistry
C、the chemical industry which had made profits form DDT
D、the group of people who are against Rachel Carson
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3909986.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]Afterhavingreviewedallthecandidates’applications,thebank
WhenmypredecessorsatTimereviewedecologistRachelCarson’sbookSilent
WhenmypredecessorsatTimereviewedecologistRachelCarson’sbookSilent
WhenmypredecessorsatTimereviewedecologistRachelCarson’sbookSilent
WhenmypredecessorsatTimereviewedecologistRachelCarson’sbookSilent
[originaltext]M:So,Rachel,howdidyoufinallyquit?W:Well,Ihadafriend
[originaltext]M:So,Rachel,howdidyoufinallyquit?W:Well,Ihadafriend
Eachnewcropofadolescentsalwaysseemsunfathomabletoitspredecessors.
Everyminuteofeveryday,whatecologistJamesCarltoncallsaglobal"conve
Everyminuteofeveryday,whatecologistJamesCarltoncallsaglobal"conve
随机试题
PassageTwo[br]Whatistheauthor’sattitudetowardsthe35-hourweekpolicy?S
Veryfewpeoplecangetcollegedegreebefore11,butMichaelwasan【21】.He
下列()指标表征土工织物的孔径特征。A.通过率 B.孔径 C.渗透系数
从麻醉的角度看,全身麻醉后病人采取何种体位最安全A.仰卧位 B.俯卧位 C.
担任因违法被吊销营业执照、责令关闭的公司、企业的法定代表人,并负有个人责任的,自
A.15~18B.13~16C.8~16D.7~9E.3~8W/O型乳化剂的HL
当前世界学前教育机构的发展特征之一是规模的()A.多样性 B.扩大化 C.
一国的居民可以在国际收支所有项目下,自由地将本国货币与外国货币兑换,则该国实现了
注册会计师制定的有关被审计单位2020年度财务报表审计计划的内容中,应当予以
刘某因出国工作将自己的房屋售予孙某,双方签订了《房屋买卖合同》但尚未办理转移登
最新回复
(
0
)