![]() ![]() She highlighted the importance of language and imagery in constructing a vision of a natural world without victims of exploitative economic systems. Inspired in part by Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962) and Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique (1963), Merchant’s book critically analyzed the origins and ambitions of the scientific revolution. Merchant’s book brought women to the center of scientific narratives, mobilizing students in the wake of significant environmental events such as the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear disaster and the passage of the Superfund Act, which enabled federal authorities to respond more directly to hazardous substance threats. Its publication contributed significantly to the development of ecofeminism as a field and a movement in the 1970s, revealing historic links between femininity and nature. One of the first to explore the scientific revolution through the lens of feminist ecology, the book discusses how new definitions of science and technology have perpetrated the degradation of both nature and women. ![]() Merchant, a professor emerita in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management (ESPM), wrote The Death of Nature in 1980. In a recent article in Public Books, Paula Findlen, a Berkeley alumna of the history department, discusses Merchant’s groundbreaking work and its outsized influence on the field. ![]() Forty years after the publication of Carolyn Merchant’s The Death of Nature, the book remains a central text of ecofeminism and ecology. ![]()
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