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This brief biography looks at the life of marine biologist and author Rachel Carson, who wrote the book "Silent Spring," widely credited with launching the modern environmental movement. After earning a graduate degree in zoology from Johns Hopkins University, Carson struggled to find employment as an independent woman during the Great Depression of the 1930s, but she eventually secured a role working as a scientist for a federal agency. In 1951, she was able to leave that job upon publication of her first bestseller, "The Sea Around Us." Her follow-up to that book would be even more successful, but also would be more politically divisive. Released to widespread acclaim in 1962, "Silent Spring" exposed the negative ecological toll of pesticides upon animals other than insects, including birds, fish, and humans. Chemical industry groups tried to label Carson as a "hysterical woman" out to damage the American system of "free enterprise" capitalism, but many scientists & politicians were persuaded by her arguments. Although Carson died of cancer in 1964 and therefore did not live to see the full flowering of the environmental movement during the Sixties and Seventies, her concerns about maintaining clean air & water helped bring forth numerous nonprofit organizations & regulatory agencies designed to address such problems. In recent years attempts to move the USA toward green energy have received setbacks, but a new generation of activists continues to be inspired by Carson's legacy to push for a move sustainable world.
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By Logan Rogers5
2020 ratings
This brief biography looks at the life of marine biologist and author Rachel Carson, who wrote the book "Silent Spring," widely credited with launching the modern environmental movement. After earning a graduate degree in zoology from Johns Hopkins University, Carson struggled to find employment as an independent woman during the Great Depression of the 1930s, but she eventually secured a role working as a scientist for a federal agency. In 1951, she was able to leave that job upon publication of her first bestseller, "The Sea Around Us." Her follow-up to that book would be even more successful, but also would be more politically divisive. Released to widespread acclaim in 1962, "Silent Spring" exposed the negative ecological toll of pesticides upon animals other than insects, including birds, fish, and humans. Chemical industry groups tried to label Carson as a "hysterical woman" out to damage the American system of "free enterprise" capitalism, but many scientists & politicians were persuaded by her arguments. Although Carson died of cancer in 1964 and therefore did not live to see the full flowering of the environmental movement during the Sixties and Seventies, her concerns about maintaining clean air & water helped bring forth numerous nonprofit organizations & regulatory agencies designed to address such problems. In recent years attempts to move the USA toward green energy have received setbacks, but a new generation of activists continues to be inspired by Carson's legacy to push for a move sustainable world.
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