Ecofeminism Essays

  • Theories and Development of Ecofeminism

    2593 Words  | 6 Pages

    Ecofeminism Ecofeminism is an environmental movement, born in the late 1970s and early 1980s, from the necessity to give the possibility to women to have an active participation in ecological issues. In the West, gender and environment are the main topics of a large literature, which relate these two elements in ideological terms. In India however, ecofeminism has become an important and fundamental movement able to protect, in an efficient way, even if towards a slow process, the environmental system

  • Eco-feminism

    1175 Words  | 3 Pages

    ecological degradation, and the exploitation of workers, race, and class. In the midst of these troubles, a movement known as ecofeminism appears to be gaining recognition. In the following, I hope to illustrate this revitalization movement . I will begin by characterizing a definition of ecofeminism; I will then bring to the forefront the ethical issues that Ecofeminism is involved with, then distinguish primary ideas and criticisms. Though in theory, ecological feminism has been around for a number

  • Ecofeminism

    4940 Words  | 10 Pages

    Ecofeminism The first part of this essay will outline the main arguments of the feminist ecologists and deal with the concept of Ecofeminism. The second part will sketch the main arguments of Rosemary Radford Reuther book, "Gaia and God". The final part of this essay will analyze: Starhawk's The Spiral Dance, "Witchcraft as Goddess Religion", The Homeric Hymn to Demeter, and "the Descent of Inanna" and examine the pros and cons of the position that a return to goddess worship would save our

  • A Feminist Perspective of Atwood's Surfacing

    2906 Words  | 6 Pages

    patriarchal reasoned dualities between the masculine and feminine world; through the domination and oppression of the feminine and natural world, and through the Surfacer's own internal struggle and re-embracement of nature. Since "the voices of ecofeminism are diverse," it requires definition (Zabinski 315). A postmodern movement that "abandons the hardheaded scientific approach . . . in favor of a more spiritual consciousness," ecofeminist theory links the oppression of women with the oppression

  • Eco-feminism

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Women have long been associated with nature.” In the following essay Judith Plant sets out the main principles (in regards to ecofeminism): the closeness of women to nature; the belief that the domination of women and the destruction of nature have the same root cause; patriarchy; and the need to re-establish for nature the organic metaphor over the machine metaphor. Judith Plant believes that women have long been associated with nature and that historically, women have had no real power in the

  • Embodying Ecofeminism

    1544 Words  | 4 Pages

    Embodying Ecofeminism I felt a little strange the first day I walked into our class, mostly because I was somewhat of an outsider in a group who seemed to know each other. I sat down and listened as class began. I found it hard to focus on what was being said. Words seemed to rise and fill the room without creating any form that I could recognize. I listened hard and tried to engage myself in the dialogue. Some of the other students seemed involved, some resistant, trying to argue their own

  • Ecofeminism Explanation

    1523 Words  | 4 Pages

    Explanation of Ecofeminism Perspective Ecofeminism was formed by Francoise d’Eaubonne in 1974 to demonstrate how women can make significant contributions to the bettering of the environment. Ecofeminism is a movement that combines ecological and feminism characteristics. It is based on the ecological problems along with the exploitation of women. Ecofeminism comes from the critsism of sexism within the green movement. Women and men play a role in environmental issues, specifically their differences

  • Drawing The Boundaries Of The Ethical Self

    3164 Words  | 7 Pages

    Drawing The Boundaries Of The Ethical Self This paper evaluates some philosophical views regarding the self who is an ethical deliberator and agent-specifically the traditional atomistic individualist self and the expanded biocentric self of deep ecology. The paper then presents an alternative manner of thinking about the ethical self which avoids some of the philosophical difficulties of the foregoing views. This alternative draws on the recent work by Val Plumwood and Donna Haraway. Haraway's

  • Some Problems With Ecofeminism

    2563 Words  | 6 Pages

    Some Problems With Ecofeminism ABSTRACT: Karen Warren presents and defends the ecofeminist position that people are wrong in dominating nature as a whole or in part (individual animals, species, ecosystems, mountains), for the same reason that subordinating women to the will and purposes of men is wrong. She claims that all feminists must object to both types of domination because both are expressions of the same "logic of domination." Yet, problems arise with her claim of twin dominations. The

  • Difference Between Ecology And Ecofeminism

    1195 Words  | 3 Pages

    changes such as drought or cold. Ecofeminism is the study of the link between feminism and ecology. That is the involvement of women against environmental disruption and exploitation. Ecology is the interaction between living organisms and their environment.

  • Ecofeminism: The Feminism of Ecology

    3145 Words  | 7 Pages

    There are many, different oppressions throughout human society that are intricately woven together and interconnected. Many of these oppressions are formed within a patriarchal, Christian theology and involve the body: the body of Earth, the bodies of women, the body of animals. Sallie McFague sets up a model of bodies to help break these connected oppressions. McFague’s work emphasizes that the body and its oppressions are what connects Christian theology, feminism, and ecology. Her model focuses

  • Ecofeminism: Interconnecting Women, Nature, and Oppression

    2208 Words  | 5 Pages

    Ecofeminism deals with ecological and feminist analyses and movements. It shows the relationship between women and nature in the view of historically, human-earth, patriarchal social structures and world views interconnected with oppression of women and nature. Feminist analysis mainly focused on Liberal, Marxist or Socialist, Cultural, Radical, Post-colonialist and Post-modernist approaches. Political ideology of feminism makes an effort to make women a self-conscious category, and it gives a power

  • Ecofeminism- Links the domination of women and the domination of nature.

    973 Words  | 2 Pages

    Expanding Feminist Activism Ecological Feminism: local/global activism Ecofeminism- Links the domination of women and the domination of nature. Ecofeminism places importance on our connection as people of one earth and also recognizes how women have been, historically in the capitalist patriarchy, labeled as subordinate in relation to the dominating body. The environment falls into this subordinate category because it continues to be pressed and used to benefit the man machine. It may be hard

  • The Double Bind Analysis

    867 Words  | 2 Pages

    Critical Thinking & Analytical Paper Writing Assignment #2 Ecofeminism is an activist and academic movement that sees critical connections between the domination of nature and the exploitation of women (Lorentzen, 2002). It is also joining the fight of feminism so that in a commitment to ending the subordination of all women, we must not only look at the oppression of women, but are also able to be the voice for nature. Ecofeminism plays a role in the context of the social, political and ecological

  • Environmentalism And Feminism Case Study

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    the root cause of environmental degradation, ecofeminists build upon their position. They argue that anthropocentrism has historically functioned as androcentrism and that this reality must be addressed within the study of environmental ethics. Ecofeminism is a discipline within environmental philosophy that posits an alliance between women and nature. Ecofeminists argue that the domination of nature

  • Eco-Feminism and Feminism in Prodigal Summer

    1082 Words  | 3 Pages

    Barbara Kingsolver is an active Eco-Feminist and likes to portray her ecofeminism in the books that she writes. One particular book that shows Ecofeminism is Prodigal Summer. Prodigal Summer portrays Ecofeminism by showing how feminist view nature, how Females can be farmers, and how each of the female characters have power over the male characters and end up helping them. In my opinion, all ecofeminism is a category under Feminism that deals with feminism in nature and so I decided to take a look

  • Feminist Analysis Of Militarism

    2090 Words  | 5 Pages

    and /or religion. This approach denies the importance of the individual's actions in daily life about socially constructed sex and gender roles. The system is not the target of analysis, rather the individual is seen as the burden of solution. Ecofeminism seeks to change and create a new system, a system which does not put the blame and pressure on the

  • Eco-feminism

    1132 Words  | 3 Pages

    at preserving the ecological balance of the earth. Francoise d'Eaubonne considered this potential to be realized in an ecological revolution. As such, present ecofeminism is considered a social movement on the leading edge, and includes peace, feminist, and ecological concerns, as well as drawing content from ancient traditions. Ecofeminism identifies patriarchal dominations: sexism, racism, classism, heterosexism, plus naturism. It is the union of radical or cultural feminism with radical ecology

  • Karen Warren Essay

    878 Words  | 2 Pages

    Promise of Ecological Feminism by Karen Warren. Reading Warren’s essay, I too think that ecofeminism applies to both the controlling of women and nature. I came to this conclusion considering how these two concepts are connected and show similar characteristics. Warren argues in this essay that there are connections between the “domination of women” and the “domination of nature,” which is the meaning of ecofeminism (Pojman, Pojman, & McShane, 2016, p. 390). She also argues that the patriarchy oppresses

  • Terry Tempest Williams' Refuge

    1266 Words  | 3 Pages

    has recently begun which looks exclusively to preserve this balance, ecofeminism. Terry Tempest Williams is just that, an ecofeminist. In her memoir Refuge¸ Williams attempts to examine the ecological and social worlds that balance on this pendulum. Refuge brings together a range of topics and ideas with her own mix of environmental, social, and cultural problems to present the reader with a clearly laid out stance for ecofeminism. There is an ecofeminist stance in Refuge because she believes women