Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction

[Catriona Sandilands]'s essay, "Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity," is an application of postmodern queer theory to ecofeminism. Since ecofeminism is a coalition between feminism and environmentalism, it requires what the author call...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:NWSA journal 1997-10, Vol.9 (3), p.1-17
1. Verfasser: Longenecker, Marlene
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
container_end_page 17
container_issue 3
container_start_page 1
container_title NWSA journal
container_volume 9
creator Longenecker, Marlene
description [Catriona Sandilands]'s essay, "Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity," is an application of postmodern queer theory to ecofeminism. Since ecofeminism is a coalition between feminism and environmentalism, it requires what the author calls "new coalitional myths" that deconstruct not only "woman" but "nature" as well. Fixed identities, like static political positions, do not lend themselves to coalitions but in fact defeat them. The old identity politics, Sandilands argues, only return us to conventional relationships between women and nature, in which nature is used as a rationale for sexism (as the "origin" of repressive social categories like gender) or for an essentialist claim to women's special relationship with nature that Sandilands disavows. Even "strategic" essentialism -- the political rather than metaphysical claim by some feminists of women's identification with nature -- is, she claims, "never simply `strategic'" (28) but always threatens to reinscribe patriarchal discourse. Instead, she maintains, postmodern identities -- unstable, indeterminate, ironic -- are prerequisites to an emancipatory politics for women and for nature. The "new" feminist identities modeled on the "queer" or the "cyborg," especially as articulated by Judith Butler and Donna Haraway, are, for Sandilands, the most productive grounds for merging poststructuralist feminism with ecological feminism; in their fundamentally parodic and performative relationships to patriarchal discourse, queer and cyborg identities "open up different subject positions to the possibility of influence by others" (24). This "influence," she believes, is only possible in conditions of radical contingency and requires what she calls "performative affinity" -- a term that combines Butler's idea of gender as performance with Haraway's " politics of affinity" to describe a subject position that both breaks the patriarchal identification of woman with nature and maintains a postmodern, feminist connection with nature, based not on "matriarchal" reversals of patriarchal representations but in playful parody of them. In the section called "The Culture of Nature," [Linda Vance] raises a series of questions she thinks are central to a feminist analysis of wilderness. Wilderness, she maintains, is "the part of our environment that is idealized as `perfect nature,'" nature in its "pure" form (62). Why, she wonders do we believe that the "best" nature is that w
doi_str_mv 10.2979/NWS.1997.9.3.1
format Article
fullrecord <record><control><sourceid>jstor_proqu</sourceid><recordid>TN_cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_60059787</recordid><sourceformat>XML</sourceformat><sourcesystem>PC</sourcesystem><jstor_id>4316527</jstor_id><sourcerecordid>4316527</sourcerecordid><originalsourceid>FETCH-LOGICAL-c1637-a6fad36ab02b961cbf0f00c4794f85c0235b393543c60a4d1ff44b5ba24ee4de3</originalsourceid><addsrcrecordid>eNpdkD1PwzAQhi0EEqWwMjFEDExNOH_EidlQVaBSBQOgjpbj2NAqtYudIPXf46qIgVvupHve0-lB6BJDQUQlbp-XrwUWoipEQQt8hEa4JFWO61ocpxkY5MBLforOYlxDKkbECLGl3xg3yWbad_5jN8mUa7P-02Qz970K3qVlf5fdu2zu-uDbQfcr787RiVVdNBe_fYzeH2Zv06d88fI4n94vco05rXLFrWopVw2QRnCsGwsWQLNKMFuXGggtGypoyajmoFiLrWWsKRtFmDGsNXSMbg53t8F_DSb2crOK2nSdcsYPUXKAUlR1lcDrf-DaD8Gl3yShlDDAlCSoOEA6-BiDsXIbVhsVdhKD3BuUyaDcG5RCUolT4OoQWMfehz-aUcyTWfoDIXFrdQ</addsrcrecordid><sourcetype>Aggregation Database</sourcetype><iscdi>true</iscdi><recordtype>article</recordtype><pqid>233240132</pqid></control><display><type>article</type><title>Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction</title><source>Jstor Complete Legacy</source><source>Sociological Abstracts</source><creator>Longenecker, Marlene</creator><creatorcontrib>Longenecker, Marlene</creatorcontrib><description>[Catriona Sandilands]'s essay, "Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity," is an application of postmodern queer theory to ecofeminism. Since ecofeminism is a coalition between feminism and environmentalism, it requires what the author calls "new coalitional myths" that deconstruct not only "woman" but "nature" as well. Fixed identities, like static political positions, do not lend themselves to coalitions but in fact defeat them. The old identity politics, Sandilands argues, only return us to conventional relationships between women and nature, in which nature is used as a rationale for sexism (as the "origin" of repressive social categories like gender) or for an essentialist claim to women's special relationship with nature that Sandilands disavows. Even "strategic" essentialism -- the political rather than metaphysical claim by some feminists of women's identification with nature -- is, she claims, "never simply `strategic'" (28) but always threatens to reinscribe patriarchal discourse. Instead, she maintains, postmodern identities -- unstable, indeterminate, ironic -- are prerequisites to an emancipatory politics for women and for nature. The "new" feminist identities modeled on the "queer" or the "cyborg," especially as articulated by Judith Butler and Donna Haraway, are, for Sandilands, the most productive grounds for merging poststructuralist feminism with ecological feminism; in their fundamentally parodic and performative relationships to patriarchal discourse, queer and cyborg identities "open up different subject positions to the possibility of influence by others" (24). This "influence," she believes, is only possible in conditions of radical contingency and requires what she calls "performative affinity" -- a term that combines Butler's idea of gender as performance with Haraway's " politics of affinity" to describe a subject position that both breaks the patriarchal identification of woman with nature and maintains a postmodern, feminist connection with nature, based not on "matriarchal" reversals of patriarchal representations but in playful parody of them. In the section called "The Culture of Nature," [Linda Vance] raises a series of questions she thinks are central to a feminist analysis of wilderness. Wilderness, she maintains, is "the part of our environment that is idealized as `perfect nature,'" nature in its "pure" form (62). Why, she wonders do we believe that the "best" nature is that which is most other, most separate, most untouched by culture? If we think of wilderness as "perfect" or "pure," what aspects of nature are therefore necessarily "impure," "imperfect," inferior? Does wilderness, like the "true woman," get worshipped only so that other forms of nature (your local park, your own backyard) will, like "impure women," be scorned? If we spend our resources protecting "virgin" (the pun, of course, is telling) forests, what happens to the ones that are, as it were, damaged goods? Does wilderness in fact serve to open more space for the exploitation of nature not wild enough to be preserved? As Vance points out, it is the ecosystems closest to us that are "most in need of remedial attention" (63) but that suffer by comparison to the wild spaces in our symbolic imagination. Who is served by these conceptions of a nonhuman wildness "beyond" culture?</description><identifier>ISSN: 1040-0656</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 2151-7363</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1527-1889</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2151-7371</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.2979/NWS.1997.9.3.1</identifier><identifier>CODEN: NWJOEG</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Baltimore: Indiana University Press</publisher><subject>Butler, Judith ; Cultural identity ; Environment ; Environmental Movements ; Environmentalism ; Females ; Feminism ; Feminist Theory ; Human Ecology ; Identification ; Jewish people ; Literature ; Natural environment ; Politics ; Post structuralist linguistics ; Postmodernism ; Sentence structure ; Sexism ; Theoretical Problems ; Wilderness ; Women</subject><ispartof>NWSA journal, 1997-10, Vol.9 (3), p.1-17</ispartof><rights>Copyright 1998 NWSA Journal</rights><rights>Copyright Indiana University Press Fall 1997</rights><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c1637-a6fad36ab02b961cbf0f00c4794f85c0235b393543c60a4d1ff44b5ba24ee4de3</citedby><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c1637-a6fad36ab02b961cbf0f00c4794f85c0235b393543c60a4d1ff44b5ba24ee4de3</cites></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/4316527$$EPDF$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/4316527$$EHTML$$P50$$Gjstor$$H</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>314,776,780,799,27321,27901,27902,33751,33752,57992,58225</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Longenecker, Marlene</creatorcontrib><title>Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction</title><title>NWSA journal</title><description>[Catriona Sandilands]'s essay, "Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity," is an application of postmodern queer theory to ecofeminism. Since ecofeminism is a coalition between feminism and environmentalism, it requires what the author calls "new coalitional myths" that deconstruct not only "woman" but "nature" as well. Fixed identities, like static political positions, do not lend themselves to coalitions but in fact defeat them. The old identity politics, Sandilands argues, only return us to conventional relationships between women and nature, in which nature is used as a rationale for sexism (as the "origin" of repressive social categories like gender) or for an essentialist claim to women's special relationship with nature that Sandilands disavows. Even "strategic" essentialism -- the political rather than metaphysical claim by some feminists of women's identification with nature -- is, she claims, "never simply `strategic'" (28) but always threatens to reinscribe patriarchal discourse. Instead, she maintains, postmodern identities -- unstable, indeterminate, ironic -- are prerequisites to an emancipatory politics for women and for nature. The "new" feminist identities modeled on the "queer" or the "cyborg," especially as articulated by Judith Butler and Donna Haraway, are, for Sandilands, the most productive grounds for merging poststructuralist feminism with ecological feminism; in their fundamentally parodic and performative relationships to patriarchal discourse, queer and cyborg identities "open up different subject positions to the possibility of influence by others" (24). This "influence," she believes, is only possible in conditions of radical contingency and requires what she calls "performative affinity" -- a term that combines Butler's idea of gender as performance with Haraway's " politics of affinity" to describe a subject position that both breaks the patriarchal identification of woman with nature and maintains a postmodern, feminist connection with nature, based not on "matriarchal" reversals of patriarchal representations but in playful parody of them. In the section called "The Culture of Nature," [Linda Vance] raises a series of questions she thinks are central to a feminist analysis of wilderness. Wilderness, she maintains, is "the part of our environment that is idealized as `perfect nature,'" nature in its "pure" form (62). Why, she wonders do we believe that the "best" nature is that which is most other, most separate, most untouched by culture? If we think of wilderness as "perfect" or "pure," what aspects of nature are therefore necessarily "impure," "imperfect," inferior? Does wilderness, like the "true woman," get worshipped only so that other forms of nature (your local park, your own backyard) will, like "impure women," be scorned? If we spend our resources protecting "virgin" (the pun, of course, is telling) forests, what happens to the ones that are, as it were, damaged goods? Does wilderness in fact serve to open more space for the exploitation of nature not wild enough to be preserved? As Vance points out, it is the ecosystems closest to us that are "most in need of remedial attention" (63) but that suffer by comparison to the wild spaces in our symbolic imagination. Who is served by these conceptions of a nonhuman wildness "beyond" culture?</description><subject>Butler, Judith</subject><subject>Cultural identity</subject><subject>Environment</subject><subject>Environmental Movements</subject><subject>Environmentalism</subject><subject>Females</subject><subject>Feminism</subject><subject>Feminist Theory</subject><subject>Human Ecology</subject><subject>Identification</subject><subject>Jewish people</subject><subject>Literature</subject><subject>Natural environment</subject><subject>Politics</subject><subject>Post structuralist linguistics</subject><subject>Postmodernism</subject><subject>Sentence structure</subject><subject>Sexism</subject><subject>Theoretical Problems</subject><subject>Wilderness</subject><subject>Women</subject><issn>1040-0656</issn><issn>2151-7363</issn><issn>1527-1889</issn><issn>2151-7371</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>1997</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>BENPR</sourceid><sourceid>BHHNA</sourceid><sourceid>GUQSH</sourceid><sourceid>M2O</sourceid><sourceid>PAF</sourceid><sourceid>PQLNA</sourceid><sourceid>PROLI</sourceid><sourceid>QXPDG</sourceid><recordid>eNpdkD1PwzAQhi0EEqWwMjFEDExNOH_EidlQVaBSBQOgjpbj2NAqtYudIPXf46qIgVvupHve0-lB6BJDQUQlbp-XrwUWoipEQQt8hEa4JFWO61ocpxkY5MBLforOYlxDKkbECLGl3xg3yWbad_5jN8mUa7P-02Qz970K3qVlf5fdu2zu-uDbQfcr787RiVVdNBe_fYzeH2Zv06d88fI4n94vco05rXLFrWopVw2QRnCsGwsWQLNKMFuXGggtGypoyajmoFiLrWWsKRtFmDGsNXSMbg53t8F_DSb2crOK2nSdcsYPUXKAUlR1lcDrf-DaD8Gl3yShlDDAlCSoOEA6-BiDsXIbVhsVdhKD3BuUyaDcG5RCUolT4OoQWMfehz-aUcyTWfoDIXFrdQ</recordid><startdate>19971001</startdate><enddate>19971001</enddate><creator>Longenecker, Marlene</creator><general>Indiana University Press</general><general>Johns Hopkins University Press</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>0-V</scope><scope>3V.</scope><scope>7R6</scope><scope>7U4</scope><scope>7XB</scope><scope>8FK</scope><scope>ABUWG</scope><scope>AEUYN</scope><scope>AFKRA</scope><scope>AIMQZ</scope><scope>ALSLI</scope><scope>AZQEC</scope><scope>BENPR</scope><scope>BHHNA</scope><scope>CCPQU</scope><scope>CLO</scope><scope>DWI</scope><scope>DWQXO</scope><scope>GNUQQ</scope><scope>GUQSH</scope><scope>HEHIP</scope><scope>LIQON</scope><scope>M2O</scope><scope>M2R</scope><scope>M2S</scope><scope>MBDVC</scope><scope>PAF</scope><scope>PPXUT</scope><scope>PQEST</scope><scope>PQGEN</scope><scope>PQLNA</scope><scope>PQQKQ</scope><scope>PQUKI</scope><scope>PRINS</scope><scope>PROLI</scope><scope>Q9U</scope><scope>QXPDG</scope><scope>S0X</scope><scope>WZK</scope></search><sort><creationdate>19971001</creationdate><title>Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction</title><author>Longenecker, Marlene</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c1637-a6fad36ab02b961cbf0f00c4794f85c0235b393543c60a4d1ff44b5ba24ee4de3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>1997</creationdate><topic>Butler, Judith</topic><topic>Cultural identity</topic><topic>Environment</topic><topic>Environmental Movements</topic><topic>Environmentalism</topic><topic>Females</topic><topic>Feminism</topic><topic>Feminist Theory</topic><topic>Human Ecology</topic><topic>Identification</topic><topic>Jewish people</topic><topic>Literature</topic><topic>Natural environment</topic><topic>Politics</topic><topic>Post structuralist linguistics</topic><topic>Postmodernism</topic><topic>Sentence structure</topic><topic>Sexism</topic><topic>Theoretical Problems</topic><topic>Wilderness</topic><topic>Women</topic><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Longenecker, Marlene</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Corporate)</collection><collection>GenderWatch</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest One Sustainability</collection><collection>ProQuest Central UK/Ireland</collection><collection>ProQuest One Literature</collection><collection>Social Science Premium Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Essentials</collection><collection>ProQuest Central</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts</collection><collection>ProQuest One Community College</collection><collection>Literature Online Core (LION Core) (legacy)</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Korea</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Student</collection><collection>Research Library Prep</collection><collection>Sociology Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest One Literature - U.S. Customers Only</collection><collection>Research Library</collection><collection>Social Science Database</collection><collection>Sociology Database</collection><collection>Research Library (Corporate)</collection><collection>ProQuest Learning: Literature</collection><collection>Literature Online Premium (LION Premium) (legacy)</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)</collection><collection>ProQuest Women's &amp; Gender Studies</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION) - US Customers Only</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition</collection><collection>ProQuest Central China</collection><collection>Literature Online (LION)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Basic</collection><collection>Diversity Collection</collection><collection>SIRS Editorial</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)</collection><jtitle>NWSA journal</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Longenecker, Marlene</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction</atitle><jtitle>NWSA journal</jtitle><date>1997-10-01</date><risdate>1997</risdate><volume>9</volume><issue>3</issue><spage>1</spage><epage>17</epage><pages>1-17</pages><issn>1040-0656</issn><issn>2151-7363</issn><eissn>1527-1889</eissn><eissn>2151-7371</eissn><coden>NWJOEG</coden><abstract>[Catriona Sandilands]'s essay, "Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity," is an application of postmodern queer theory to ecofeminism. Since ecofeminism is a coalition between feminism and environmentalism, it requires what the author calls "new coalitional myths" that deconstruct not only "woman" but "nature" as well. Fixed identities, like static political positions, do not lend themselves to coalitions but in fact defeat them. The old identity politics, Sandilands argues, only return us to conventional relationships between women and nature, in which nature is used as a rationale for sexism (as the "origin" of repressive social categories like gender) or for an essentialist claim to women's special relationship with nature that Sandilands disavows. Even "strategic" essentialism -- the political rather than metaphysical claim by some feminists of women's identification with nature -- is, she claims, "never simply `strategic'" (28) but always threatens to reinscribe patriarchal discourse. Instead, she maintains, postmodern identities -- unstable, indeterminate, ironic -- are prerequisites to an emancipatory politics for women and for nature. The "new" feminist identities modeled on the "queer" or the "cyborg," especially as articulated by Judith Butler and Donna Haraway, are, for Sandilands, the most productive grounds for merging poststructuralist feminism with ecological feminism; in their fundamentally parodic and performative relationships to patriarchal discourse, queer and cyborg identities "open up different subject positions to the possibility of influence by others" (24). This "influence," she believes, is only possible in conditions of radical contingency and requires what she calls "performative affinity" -- a term that combines Butler's idea of gender as performance with Haraway's " politics of affinity" to describe a subject position that both breaks the patriarchal identification of woman with nature and maintains a postmodern, feminist connection with nature, based not on "matriarchal" reversals of patriarchal representations but in playful parody of them. In the section called "The Culture of Nature," [Linda Vance] raises a series of questions she thinks are central to a feminist analysis of wilderness. Wilderness, she maintains, is "the part of our environment that is idealized as `perfect nature,'" nature in its "pure" form (62). Why, she wonders do we believe that the "best" nature is that which is most other, most separate, most untouched by culture? If we think of wilderness as "perfect" or "pure," what aspects of nature are therefore necessarily "impure," "imperfect," inferior? Does wilderness, like the "true woman," get worshipped only so that other forms of nature (your local park, your own backyard) will, like "impure women," be scorned? If we spend our resources protecting "virgin" (the pun, of course, is telling) forests, what happens to the ones that are, as it were, damaged goods? Does wilderness in fact serve to open more space for the exploitation of nature not wild enough to be preserved? As Vance points out, it is the ecosystems closest to us that are "most in need of remedial attention" (63) but that suffer by comparison to the wild spaces in our symbolic imagination. Who is served by these conceptions of a nonhuman wildness "beyond" culture?</abstract><cop>Baltimore</cop><pub>Indiana University Press</pub><doi>10.2979/NWS.1997.9.3.1</doi><tpages>17</tpages></addata></record>
fulltext fulltext
identifier ISSN: 1040-0656
ispartof NWSA journal, 1997-10, Vol.9 (3), p.1-17
issn 1040-0656
2151-7363
1527-1889
2151-7371
language eng
recordid cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_60059787
source Jstor Complete Legacy; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Butler, Judith
Cultural identity
Environment
Environmental Movements
Environmentalism
Females
Feminism
Feminist Theory
Human Ecology
Identification
Jewish people
Literature
Natural environment
Politics
Post structuralist linguistics
Postmodernism
Sentence structure
Sexism
Theoretical Problems
Wilderness
Women
title Women, Ecology, and the Environment: An Introduction
url https://sfx.bib-bvb.de/sfx_tum?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2025-02-02T19%3A48%3A47IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-jstor_proqu&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Women,%20Ecology,%20and%20the%20Environment:%20An%20Introduction&rft.jtitle=NWSA%20journal&rft.au=Longenecker,%20Marlene&rft.date=1997-10-01&rft.volume=9&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=1&rft.epage=17&rft.pages=1-17&rft.issn=1040-0656&rft.eissn=1527-1889&rft.coden=NWJOEG&rft_id=info:doi/10.2979/NWS.1997.9.3.1&rft_dat=%3Cjstor_proqu%3E4316527%3C/jstor_proqu%3E%3Curl%3E%3C/url%3E&disable_directlink=true&sfx.directlink=off&sfx.report_link=0&rft_id=info:oai/&rft_pqid=233240132&rft_id=info:pmid/&rft_jstor_id=4316527&rfr_iscdi=true