Analysis Of Fables For Tomorrow And The Clan Of One-Breasted Women

813 Words2 Pages

Two essays read by the class, “Fables for Tomorrow” and “The Clan of One-Breasted Women”, target the idea that chemical compounds have an impact on nature. They make it a priority to get their points across that limiting pesticides and chemical compounds will help make America, and other places around the world a better place. They provide very educational messages in getting their points across about the dangerous roles the pesticides play in the world today. Humans and the government cause this through authorization of plenty of the events going on in the environment. Both of the authors, who are female activists for the environment, focus on chemical compounds causing diseases and harm to the environment. Rachel Carson, the author of “Fables …show more content…

“I belong to a Clan of One-Breasted Women. My mother, my grandmothers, and six aunts have all had mastectomies. Seven are dead. The two who survive have just completed rounds of chemotherapy and radiation” (Williams 275). This author uses real life situations from her life to create this short story. Her story reflects on what she thought had been a flash in the night her whole life until talking with her father. Indeed, it had not been a flash in the night and was instead a bomb during the Nuclear War testing. “On August 30, 1979, during Jimmy Carter’s presidency, a suit was filed entitled “Irene Allen vs. the United States of America.” Mrs. Allen was the first to be alphabetically listed with twenty-four test cases, representative of nearly 1200 plaintiffs seeking compensation from the United States government for cancers caused from nuclear testing in Nevada” (Williams 277). With cancer being so common in the Utah area where the Nuclear testing was done many people wondered if there was a connection. “It was the first time a federal court had determined that nuclear tests had been the cause of cancers” (Williams 278). Some plaintiffs had been awarded and the other cases of this matter were not proved that nuclear testing had resulted in cancer. This was a strong topic amongst the Utah community and the United States that is still up in the air to this very day. Terry cannot prove or disprove that all these people had developed cancer from the nuclear fallout, but it is

Open Document