Rachel Carson and an Ecological View on Health

 
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Nancy Langston explores Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring through the lens of ecological health, challenging the notion of nature as separate from humanity. Langston acknowledges Jenny Price’s critique of Carson’s work but presents her own perspective shaped by Carson’s emphasis on ecological interdependence. Reflecting on her initial frustration with Silent Spring during her youth, Langston later revisited the text through the lens of environmental contamination’s impact on human health, as exemplified by a student’s personal experience with PCB pollution in Wisconsin. Within this framework, Langston discusses Carson’s work with newfound appreciation, and argues that popular dismissal of the link between ecological and human health is due to the modern belief that humans can isolate themselves from and control nature. Langston urges readers to reevaluate societal attitudes towards chemical safety and environmental stewardship.