“Forces of Nature”

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 Q3 HISTORY
T. J. Osborne
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

San Francisco Bay is the most historically consequential estuary on the Pacific coast of the Western Hemisphere. From the California gold rush through the mid-twentieth century, the infilling and polluting of the bay had gone on without interruption until three University of California, Berkeley, faculty/administrator wives stepped out of their comfort zones and acted. Catherine (“Kay”) Kerr, Sylvia McLaughlin, and Esther Gulick spearheaded what became a historic and ongoing effort to save the bay they loved. At the outset, they saw themselves neither as feminists nor as environmentalists, and certainly did not expect to be newsmakers. But the campaign they launched in the early 1960s changed the women in significant ways and helped fuel California’s rise to a leadership role in American environmentalism. Moreover, the Save the Bay movement they launched led to similar campaigns on the East Coast and Gulf Coast of the United States and to international recognition of their successes. Their efforts and achievements are perhaps best understood within the historical context of an evolving and greening California Dream of a better and more just life for all.
“自然的力量”
旧金山湾是西半球太平洋沿岸历史上最重要的河口。从加利福尼亚淘金热到二十世纪中叶,海湾的填充物和污染一直没有中断,直到加州大学伯克利分校的三位教员/行政人员的妻子走出了她们的舒适区,采取了行动。凯瑟琳(“凯”)克尔,西尔维娅·麦克劳克林和埃斯特·古力克领导了一项历史性的持续努力,以拯救他们所热爱的海湾。一开始,她们既不认为自己是女权主义者,也不认为自己是环保主义者,当然也不希望成为新闻人物。但他们在20世纪60年代初发起的运动在很大程度上改变了这些女性,并帮助加州成为美国环保主义的领导者。此外,他们发起的拯救海湾运动在美国东海岸和墨西哥湾沿岸引发了类似的运动,并使他们的成功得到了国际承认。他们的努力和成就也许最好理解在一个不断发展和绿化的加州梦的历史背景下,一个更好的和更公正的生活。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
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