ABSTRACT

Ecologies of Gender: Contemporary Nature Relations and the Nonhuman Turn examines the role of gender in recent debates about the nonhuman turn in the humanities, and critically explores the implications for a contemporary theory of gender and nature relations.

The interdisciplinary contributions in this volume each provides theoretical reflections based on an analysis of specific naturecultural processes. They reveal how "ecologies of gender" are constructed through aesthetic, epistemological, political, technological and economic practices that shape multispecies and material interrelations as well as spatial and temporal orderings. The volume includes contributions from cultural anthropology, cultural studies, film studies, literary studies, media studies, philosophy and theatre studies. The essays are organized around four key dimensions of an "ecological" understanding of gender: "creatures", "materials", "spaces" and "temporalities".

The overall aim of the volume Ecologies of Gender: Contemporary Nature Relations and the Nonhuman Turn is to explore the potentialities and limitations of the nonhuman turn for a critical analysis and theory of ecologies of gender, and thereby make an original contribution to both the environmental humanities and gender studies.

This book will be of great interest to scholars and students from the interdisciplinary field of the environmental humanities and environmental studies more broadly, as well as from gender studies and cultural theory.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Ecologies of Gender and the Nonhuman Turn

part 1|55 pages

Creatures

chapter 3|17 pages

The Arboreal Feminine

An Analysis of Affect and Activism in Two Ecofeminist Re-Enchantment Narratives from India

part 2|48 pages

Materials

chapter 4|18 pages

Plastic Ambivalence

chapter 5|14 pages

Political Drugs

Materiality in Testo Junkie

part 3|70 pages

Spaces

chapter 7|14 pages

Gender, Nature, Nonhuman Animal

Bird People (2014) and the Proliferation of Difference in Cinema

chapter 10|17 pages

An Ecohumanist Perspective

Theorizing Ecofeminism through a Spatial Analysis of Amitav Ghosh's The Hungry Tide

part 4|56 pages

Temporalities

chapter 11|17 pages

The Figure of the Human

Philosophical Narratives on Sex, Race and Organic Kinship in the “White (M)anthropocene”

chapter 12|21 pages

Speculative Ecologies

Salmon Farming and Marine Microplastics as Slow Disasters

chapter 13|16 pages

Futures of Plant-Human Mutualism

Science, Technology and Speculative Fiction