Carson's Tomorrow's Fables The author of the following excerpts uses languages to express changes and contrasts in feelings and meanings. The title of the chapter "Fables of the Tomorrow" gives the impression that the novel is a record of events and a possible future story if it is permissible to continue using existing practices and pesticides.
& Lt; Tab / & gt; In her article "Fables of Tomorrow", Rachel Carson condemns stubborn social attempts and suppresses all powerful natural forces. She encourages us to adopt another natural attitude and adopt another path that will not let us destroy. Carson thoroughly explains the technical and scientific discoveries of nuclear fusion, radiation, synthetic compounds, pesticides etc and proves that humans have destroyed using natural treasures. Mr. Carson said, "The speed of change and the speed with which new circumstances are created are not intentional natural rhythms, they follow the impulsive and unintended pace of people." In other words, the innumerable intervention of men into the flow of natural mechanisms does not take into account the potentially fatal consequences as human speed is too fast for natural natural reactions.
Essay.com/Ritchell Relationship between Carson's "Fables of Tomorrow", Thoreau's "Walden" and Emerson's "Nature"
Relationship between "Fables of the Future" of Rachel Carson, "Walden" of Thoreau and "Nature" of Emerson
"Spring of Silence" begins with the myth "tomorrow's fable" that Carson is "a small town in the center of America and seems to be in harmony with the surrounding environment." The world is connected. The reader knows that Carson is not a primitive desert but people, roads and drainage coexist with nature - until this perfect place has strange dirt. "There is no magic, there is no enemy action to silence the reproduction of a new life in this world, people will do it on their own."
Author Rachel Carson intends to use "allegory of tomorrow" as a warning for the overuse of pesticides in ecosystems. The town described in the article published in 1962 first embodies another small town. There seems to be everything in perfect harmony with nature. These animals survived in nature and surrounded by the beauty of plants. Problems in fictitious towns have found roots in other real places, and the actual events are the same as in articles. Carson described white energy or wilting of insecticide as an evil spell of the settled community. She will never fully express the true "evil spell" in the fable. Using a metaphor of evil spells, this explains that this is a mysterious disease that destroys the herd and the whole herd. People do this to themselves