Editor’s Preface
Sam Mickey
Introduction
Valerie Padilla Carroll
Part I: Ecocritical Readings
1. Ecofeminist, Post-colonial, and Anti-capitalist Possibilities in
Nalo Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring
Anna Bedford
2. “I Learnt All the Words and Broke Them Up / To Make a Single
Word: Homeland”: An Eco-Postcolonial Perspective of Resistance in
Palestinian Women’s Literature
Benay Blend
3. Pylons, Playgrounds, and Power Stations: Ecofeminism and
Landscape in Women’s Short Fiction from Wales
Michelle Deininger
4. Angela Carter’s Postmodern Wolf Tales
Karen Ya-Chu Yang
Part II: Emerging Ecofeminisms
5. “If only I had petals, my situation would be different”: The
Curious Case of Nature Reserves and Shelters for Battered Women
Edna Gorney
6. Leaning into the Light: Towards an Ecofeminist Model of Family
Therapy
Gail Grossman Freyne
7. Technofeminism and Ecofeminism: An Analysis of Geoengineering
Research
Tina Sikka
Part III: Religion and Spirituality
8. Weaving Ecofeminisms: Sharing the Reflections of Latin American
Women
Ann Hidalgo
9. Women, Water, and Ecofeminism: A Method to Respond to the
Commodification of Water
Rachel Hart Winter
10. Hope Over Powerlessness: McFague’s Meditation on the World as
God’s Body
Rebecca Meier-Rao
Part IV: Mapping Spaces: Geography and International
Perspectives
11. Dilemmas and Possibilities of Online Activism in a Gendered
Space
Jessica McLean
12. Mapping and Misrecognition: Ecofeminist Insights into Chicana
Feminist Aesthetics
Christina Holmes
13. Ecofeminist Potentials for International Environmental Law
Kate Wilkinson Cross
Sam Mickey is adjunct professor at the University of San
Francisco.
Douglas A. Vakoch is president of Messaging Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (METI) International and editor of the book series
Ecocritical Theory and Practice.
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