Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Editor’s Foreword
Sam Mickey
Part I: Overview
Introduction Karen Ya-Chu Yang
1. Françoise d’Eaubonne and Ecofeminism: Rediscovering
the Link between Women and Nature Luca Valera
Part II: Rethinking Animality
2. A Retreat on the "River Bank": Perpetuating Patriarchal Myths in Animal Stories Anja Höing
3. Visual Patriarchy:PETA Advertising and the
Commodification of Sexualized Bodies
Stephanie Baran
4. Ethical Transfeminism: Transgender Individuals’
Narratives as Contributions to Ethics of Vegetarian
Ecofeminisms Anja Koletnik
Part III: Constructing Connections
5. The Women-Nature Connection as a Key Element in the Social Construction of Western Contemporary Motherhood Adriana Teodorescu
6. The Relationship of Women’s Body Image and Experience in Nature Denise Mitten and Chiara D’Amore
7. Writing Women into Back-to-the-Land: Feminism, Appropriation, and Identity in the 1970s Feminist Magazine Country Women Valerie Padilla Carroll
Part IV: Mediating Practices
8. Bilha Givon as Sartre’s "Third Party" in
Environmental Dialogues
Shlomit Tamari
9. "Yo soy mujer" ¿yo soy ecologista? Feminist and Ecological Consciousness at the Women’s Intercultural Center Christina Holmes
10. The Politics of Land, Water, and Toxins: Reading the Life-narratives of Three Women Oikos-carers from Kerala R. Sreejith Varma and Swarnalatha Rangarajan
11. Ecofeminism and the Telegenics of Celebrity in Documentary Film: The Case of Aradhana Seth’s Dam/Age (2003) and the Narmada Bachao Andolan Reena Dube
12. AfterwordIzabel F. O. Brandão
Douglas A. Vakoch is President of METI International, a nonprofit
research and educational organization devoted to Messaging
Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) and supporting the
sustainability of human culture on multigenerational timescales,
which is essential for long-term METI research.
Sam Mickey is Adjunct Professor in the Theology and Religious
Studies Department at the University of San Francisco, U.S.
"This innovative and engaging anthology on women and nature reveals the ongoing relevance of ecofeminism in today’s global world by emphasizing postcolonialism, ecocriticism, queer ecology, animality, and feminist materialism. Anyone interested in the nuances and complexities of the women-nature connection across histories, belief-systems, and regions will want to buy this book." — Carolyn Merchant of the University of California at Berkeley has written on the connections between ecofeminism and feminist theory and is the author of Earthcare: Women and the Environment, among other books."The myriad ways that Earthly bodies – both human and nonhuman – continue to be bound by structures of patriarchy and domination requires sustained analysis. This transnational, transdisciplinary volume brings the lens of ecofeminism to bear on timely topics, including transgender studies, animal studies, and the new materialism." — Elizabeth Allison is the Program Chair of Ecology, Spirituality, and Religion at the California Institute of Integral Studies."This fresh and exciting collection identifies privileges and invisibilities overlooked in earlier ecofeminist thinking. Authors call for ethical self-reflexivity and deep questioning of heteronormative assumptions reflecting a wide range of interdisciplinary, postcolonial, and cross-cultural perspectives. From ecosickness narratives to borderlands ecofeminism, this set of papers provides a rich and timely offering by deeply thoughtful scholars across the globe." — Stephanie Kaza, Professor Emerita, University of Vermont"Woman and Nature: Beyond Dualism in Gender, Body and Environment provides an innovative and captivating perspective on the continued relevance of ecofeminism, especially given today’s ecological crisis. Contributing to the evolution of ecofeminism and highlighting the movement towards interdisciplinary engagement via the inclusion of contemporary theoretical methods such as transgender studies, animal studies, new materialism, postcolonial studies, and ecocriticism this book is an absolute must for students and scholars across disciplines with particular relevance to those in the environmental humanities, environmental and sustainability studies, philosophy, theology, religious studies, and international relations." - Sarah O'Brien, Drew Theological School
Ask a Question About this Product More... |