ABSTRACT

Around the globe, unfettered industrialisation has marched forth in unison with massive social inequities. Making matters worse, anthropogenic pressures on Earth’s living systems are causing alarming rates of thermal expansion, sea-level rise, biodiversity losses in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and a sixth mass extinction. As various disciplines have shown, rich white men in the Global North are the main (although not the only) perpetrators of this slow violence. This book demonstrates that industrial/breadwinner masculinities have come at terrible costs to the living planet and ecomodern masculinities have failed us as well, men included.

This book is dedicated to a third and relationally focused pathway that the authors call ecological masculinities. Here, they explore ways that masculinities can advocate and embody broader, deeper and wider care for the global through to local (‘glocal’) commons. Ecological Masculinities works with the wisdoms of four main streams of influence that have come before us. They are: masculinities politics, deep ecology, ecological feminism and feminist care theory. The authors work with profeminist approaches to the conceptualisations and embodiments of modern Western masculinities. From there, they introduce masculinities that give ADAM-n for Earth, others and self, striving to create a more just and ecologically viable planet for all of life.

This book is interdisciplinary. It is intended to reach (but is not restricted to) scholars exploring history, gender studies, material feminism, feminist care theory, ecological feminism, deep ecology, social ecology, environmental humanities, social sustainability, science and technology studies and philosophy.

chapter |14 pages

Prologue

part Section I|2 pages

Conceptual foundations

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Interrogating masculinities

chapter 2|24 pages

Masculine ecologisation

From industrial/breadwinner and ecomodern to ecological masculinities

part Section II|2 pages

Four streams

chapter 3|40 pages

Men and masculinities

A spectrum of views

chapter 4|23 pages

Connecting inner and outer nature

A deeper ecology for the Global North

chapter 5|37 pages

Lessons from ecological feminism

chapter 6|24 pages

Caring for the ‘glocal’ commons

part Section III|2 pages

Ecological masculinities: an emerging conversation

chapter 7|34 pages

Headwaters

Previous research on men, masculinities and Earth

chapter 8|24 pages

Ecological masculinities

Giving ADAM-n