Section I: Rachel Carson's Background

Author(s)
DOI
https://doi.org/10.18130/4xat-kx31
Description

Background of Rachel Carson.

Body
Image
Rachel Carson and Katherine Howe sitting in Howe and S. Briggs' office. Interior, taken during the late 1940's.

After her book The Sea Around Us became a best seller in September 1952, Rachel Carson was able to leave the Fish and Wildlife Service -- where she was one of a few women in high positions -- and pursue writing as her only occupation. The next book she planned to write was on human ecology.

As a scientist and a keen observer of the world around her, Rachel Carson noted in 1958 that it was pleasant to believe that much of Nature was beyond the reach of man, that God had a course for the stream of life, and Man could not interfere with it. The physical environment was to mold Life, and Life should not have the power to change drastically or destroy the physical world. Carson had these beliefs for a long time and at first refused to acknowledge that her beliefs were being threatened. But she realized she could no longer ignore what she was seeing, and she felt it was time someone wrote about the truthWe have not used Rachel Carson's exact words because Fran Collins, the Trustee of Rachel Carson's estate, does not want any quotations from Carson to appear on the WWW. You may read her exact words in the source cited. (Graham, pp. 13-14).

Image
Rachel Carson, sitting on a peak, watching migrating hawks through binoculars at Hawk Mountain, PA., in 1945.
Citation
Caroline Whitbeck. . Section I: Rachel Carson's Background. Online Ethics Center. DOI:https://doi.org/10.18130/4xat-kx31. https://onlineethics.org/cases/section-i-rachel-carsons-background.