Rachel Carson-Silent Spring: A Brief History of Ecology as a Subversive Subject
In the late 1960s Paul Shepard, a human ecologist and
philosopher, wrote the introduction for Subversive Science - a
book that offered an interdisciplinary perspective on what was
then termed "the ecological crisis." Shepard noted that a
change in western perspective was absolutely necessary: "where
now there is man-centeredness, even pathology of isolation and
fear...ecology as applied to man faces the task of renewing a
balanced view." Ecology was less important as a scientific
discipline than for its holistic perspective. There is, Shepard
maintained, much that is radical in ecology: "The ideological
status of ecology is that of a resistance movement. Its Rachel
Carsons and Aldo Leopolds are subversive (as Sears recently
called ecology itself)." He concluded by noting that the
ecological crisis could not be ameliorated by technical and
scientifically engineered quick-fixes, but rather by invoking
"an element of humility which is foreign to our thought, which
moves us to silent wonder and glad affirmation.1 While the point is
debatable, one could certainly argue that Shepard's, Leopold's,
and Carson's revolution never took place, at least not in the
manner that they had hoped.
Rachel Carson's Silent Spring played a large
role in articulating ecology as a "subversive subject" - as a
perspective that cut against the grain of materialism,
scientism, and the technologically engineered control of
nature. But ecology's subversive moment proved all too brief,
and by the first Earth Day in 1970, American environmentalism
was headed in a very different direction. I want to examine
briefly the subversive nature of ecology in the 1960s and
demonstrate Carson's participation in that dialog; I also want
to offer a few explanations for why this subversive vision
never materialized. But if a subversively ecological
perspective was not the legacy of Silent Spring, then what was?
My claim is that an important legacy of Silent
Spring is the adoption of a very healthy and widespread
skepticism concerning the scientific control of both the body
and the environment.
Silent Spring laid bare a curious split within
science that had its origin in the disputes between naturalists
and experimental biologists of the early twentieth century. On
the one hand, Carson speaks with the authoritative voice of
ecology - a rational discipline by the 1960s wholly accepted by
the scientific community at large for its rigorous and
falsifiable methods of interpreting nature. On the other hand,
Carson speaks as the critic of science; she did this in two
ways. First, she takes aim at the overly mechanical and
reductive sciences - economic entomology and organic chemistry
in this instance - that isolate nature to the neglect of
interconnections. Secondly, she critiques the wider - and
perhaps more nebulous - cultural authority of science and
technology to control nature. The two come together in the
often-quoted final paragraph of Silent Spring.
The "control of nature" is a phrase conceived in
arrogance, born of the Neanderthal age of biology and
philosophy, when it was supposed that nature exists for the
convenience of man. . . . It is our alarming misfortune that
so primitive a science has armed itself with the most modern
and terrible weapons, and that in turning them against the
insects it has also turned them against the earth.2
The point was more graphically presented in the CBS News
Reports documentary, "Rachel Carson's Silent Spring." The
program created a clear dichotomy between laboratory science -
accompanied by shots of factories and dams - and the "softer"
side of Carson's ecology that had a strange ability to speak as
a science while at the same time appearing very other than the
stereotype of science. Many of my students, for example, are
surprised to hear that Carson had a graduate degree from one of
the premier universities for experimental biology.
It was precisely this ambiguity that Shepard and Sears were
articulating when they called ecology a "subversive subject."
Radical ecology emerged from the disciplinary matrix of
academic ecology. The Leopold of Sand County
Almanac emerged from the Leopold of the U.S. Forest
Service. Similarly, Carson's subversive ecology emerged from
the laboratories of Johns Hopkins University and the offices of
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The voices of Carson, Sears
and Leopold merged with other critical currents in the postwar
era. In 1958 a concern over the dangers of nuclear test fallout
led Barry Commoner and others to organize the St. Louis
Committee for Nuclear Information. Echoing Carson's critique,
Commoner noted that the Committee emphasized "the balancing of
social judgment against cost," decisions that "should be made
by every citizen and not left to the experts."3 Murray Bookchin criticized
the uses of pesticides and preservatives in his treatise on
human ecology, Our Synthetic Environment (1962). Like Carson,
he noted that "neither science nor technology, however, is a
substitute for a balanced relationship between man and nature."
Though the laws that define that relationship are the laws of
ecology.4
Other subversives, like Paul Goodman, took aim at the entire
complex of the scientific-industrial-technocratic and
consumer-oriented west. Herbert Marcuse added fuel to the New
Left fire by claiming that "authentic ecology flows into a
militant struggle for a socialist politics which must attack
the system at its roots, both in the process of production and
in the mutilated consciousness of individuals."5 While Carson rarely waxed on
reforming the entirety of western society, there is an element
of critical theory in Silent Spring that begins to
contemplate a wholly new relationship between humans and
nature.
This message was lost to popular environmentalism of the
1970s. The cultural history of Silent Spring as an
appropriated text has yet to be written. But one can start by
looking at Peter Matthiessen's brief Time
biography for an index to the co-opted Silent
Spring. Matthiessen makes no reference to Carson's calls
for humility; he says nothing about the fundamental choices
that humans would have to make 'Silent Spring's "Other Road";
there is no mention of the ecological interconnectedness of the
world that made the threat of toxins so dire. Carson's key
contribution, in Matthiessen's estimation, lie in blowing a
whistle on the pesticide industry. "True, the damage being done
by poison chemicals today is far worse than it was when she
wrote the book," Matthiessen tells us. "Yet one shudders to
imagine how much more impoverished our habitat would be had
Silent Spring not sounded the alarm."6 Carson would have
shuddered. Silent Spring was so much more than an
anti-pesticide tract. It was an essay of ecological radicalism
that attempted to wake up a populace quiescent to the
techno-scientific control of the world.
This "radical ecology," as Carolyn Merchant calls it,
quickly flagged in the early 1970s. Indeed, Marcuse's essay on
"Ecology and Revolution" noted that the ecology movement had
been co-opted by commercial capitalism. For example, a Schlitz
malt liquor advertisement appeared in the New York
Times on the first Earth Day; it shows a man and a
woman, hand in hand, strolling along a beautiful and deserted
shoreline. Below the photograph is the copy that a Schlitz
advertising team carefully constructed to fend off Earth Day
criticism. "You've found a beautiful spot? Take us along. We
were made for each other. Leaving? Take us along. Drop us off.
The nearest trash can'll do. A thing of beauty is a joy
forever. We'd like to help keep it that way." Earth Day itself
seems to have been artfully orchestrated as a centrist issue by
Wisconsin senator Gaylord Nelson and Harvard law student Denis
Hayes. As environmentalism became a matter of political
consensus dominated by professional environmentalists, ecology
lost its subversive edge. Environmental science departments
mushroomed in academia over night and embraced the mantra of
ecology-but instead of Marcuse, Commoner, Leopold and Carson's
subversive and radical ecology, such programs were largely
developed with an emphasis on the trophic-dynamic systems of
engineered environments.7 Academic ecology most certainly became one of the
conceptual cornerstones of mainstream environmentalism. But it
was not a subversive ecology that questioned fundamental values
of economics, consumer habits, and techno-scientific control.
It represented an engineering mentality in which problems of
waste, pollution, population, biodiversity and the toxic
environment could be solved scientifically.
So if the ecological revolution never materialized in the
way that Carson had hoped, what was her legacy to the history
of science and society? Over the past thirty years green
philosophies like eco-feminism, social ecology, and deep
ecology have illustrated increasingly sophisticated systems of
thought that attempt to reconfigure the relationships between
humans, environment, and the role of science and technology in
mediating the human-nature dialectic. The growth of sociology
and ethics programs that scrutinize science, technology, and
society is especially impressive. While it is doubtful that
scientific authorities ever had free reign to do whatever they
wished, today they are held to a high degree of accountability.
The press actively keeps the public wary with news of
genetically engineered organisms, terminator seed
manipulations, irradiated food, and new pesticides. While we
might question the efficacy of such initiatives in creating
real and widespread changes in values, we have come a long way
in questioning the epistemic sovereignty of science. Carson was
not the first to do this; but she was among the first to bring
the debate into the public sphere.
Paralleling these initiatives among America's empowered
classes has been the remarkable growth of the environmental
justice movement. Since the 1970s, people of color - often
living at or below the poverty level - have come together at
the grass roots level to mount campaigns against the
environmentally racist policies of American industrialism.
These points of resistance often arise from degraded urban
spaces whose inhabitants have felt particularly victimized by
the nonarbitrary placement of incinerators and
pollution-producing factories. They have marshaled scientific
evidence -often under incredible duress- to oppose these
policies of indiscriminate environmental racism. For instance,
the "Principles of Environmental Justice" written at the First
National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in
1991 declares the rights of people of color to develop social,
political, cultural, and economic communities - collaborative
groups that define their own ecology of existence in opposition
to the technocratic top-down directives of modern business,
government, and - most notably - the professionalized
environmental lobby.8 In one sense, the environmental justice movement has
moved beyond Carson's own vision for a democratically based
subversive ecology. Seen from another perspective, it was
precisely these social movements that Carson envisioned, and it
would be easier for us to recognize the fact if Silent
Spring was not part of the conservative co-option of the
1970s.
The hope for a resurrected subversive ecology that
incorporates a vision of both human and natural diversity seems
to be on the rise. But the United States is sitting in the
backseat - with some notable exceptions - as world leaders,
scientists, and social advocates hash out a new vision of
sustaining human existence within nature. This year's World
Summit in Johannesburg boasts a truly visionary program in
which the environmental sciences will partner up with social
and economic justice advocates. Leaders are coming to realize
that there will be no technological quick-fix for the global
environmental crisis. Global warming is now being conceived of
as less a scientific and technological problem than a social
and cultural problem, and it is the perspective of ecology, to
invoke Shepard again, that lies at the core of this social.
Whether or not there is a direct link between Silent
Spring and the World Summit is besides the point; the
Summit promises to be a full realization of Carson's desire to
humble humanity into a relationship of equanimity with nature -
an overdue actualization of ecology's subversive potential.
- 1 Paul
Shepard, "Introduction: Ecology and Man - a Viewpoint," in
Paul Shepard and Daniel McKinley (eds.) The Subversive
Science: Essays Toward an Ecology of Man (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1969), pp. 1-10.
- 2
Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (New York: Houghton
Mifflin Company, 1962), p. 297.
- 3Barry
Commoner, The Closing Circle: Nature, Man and
Technology (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1971), p.
56.
- 4Lewis
Herber, Our Synthetic Environment (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1962), p. 201.
- 5Herbert Marcuse, "Ecology and Revolution,"
Liberation 16 (September 1972), p. 12.
- 6Peter
Matthiessen, "Environmentalist: Rachel Carson" in Time
Magazine. (March 29, 1999), 187.
- 7On the
rise and fall of radicalism see Robert Gottlieb,
Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American
Environmental Movement (Washington D.C., 1993).
- 8See
Gottlieb and Giovanna Di Chiro, "Nature as Community," in
William Cronon (ed.) Uncommon Ground (New York:
Norton, 1995), pp. 298-320.
Gary Kroll
Assistant Professor of
History
Plattsburgh State University at
NY
Cite this page:
"Rachel Carson-Silent Spring: A Brief History of Ecology as a Subversive Subject"
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
7/6/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Monday, September 06, 2010
<www.onlineethics.org/Topics/ProfPractice/Exemplars/BehavingWell/carsonindex/kroll.aspx>