A powerful work of scholarship that will continue to shape our thinking, debates, and actions concerning inequalities, ecology, and justice for generations to come.'<i></i>

Journal of World-Systems Research

<i>Ecofeminism as Politics</i> has pioneered the integration of social movement debates, and its dialectical approach viewing these concerns as internally related is pathbreaking. Ariel Salleh is a must-read authority on how to challenge capitalism in theory and as practice in the twenty-first century’.

Adam David Morton, University of Sydney, author of Revolution and State in Modern Mexico

One of the most original and important thinkers in the international political ecology field; Ariel Salleh unveils the blind spot at the root of contemporary ecological and social crises and her lucid call for an ‘embodied materialism’ enlightens like no other framework I know.

Arturo Escobar, anthropologist, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and author of Designs for the Pluriverse

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<i>Ecofeminism as Politics</i> makes a powerful critique of both anthropocentrism and the androcentric thinking that permeates scholarship and activist discourses on the Left. Its social movement synthesis is an essential read for those seeking solutions to our deepening systemic crises.

Jackie Smith, Sociology, University of Pittsburgh, and editor of the Journal of World-Systems Research

In a feisty attack on the view of feminism and environmentalism as single issue, disconnected movements, Ariel Salleh convincingly argues that ecofeminist politics will be the strongest force in the world against environmental depredation, economic exploitation and cultural globalisation.

Praise for the First Edition, Joan Martinez-Alier, editor of Ecologica Politica and author of Ecological Economics

This challenge to feminists, Marxists, and environmentalists, is sustained by a deep knowledge of struggles on the ground by women's, worker's, indigenous, and ecological groups. As integrative political actions are called for, their effectiveness depends on multi-dimensional theory; and here is Salleh’s contribution.

Lau Kin Chi, Cultural Studies, Lingnan University, Hong Kong, and founding member of the Global University for Sustainability

Neoliberalism has not eliminated poverty, nor discrimination of women, nor exploitation of the Earth; neither economists, politicians, nor theoreticians know a way out. Marxists ignore both nature's and women's contribution to the production of wealth, but as ecofeminists show, this is the lost key to building Another World.

Maria Mies, ecofeminist activist and author of Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale

I place Ariel Salleh’s scholarship in the front rank with the work of other socialist ecofeminists such as Vandana Shiva or ecofeminists generally like Rosemary Ruether and Susan Griffin.

Praise for the First Edition, Max Oelschlaeger, philosopher, author of Caring for Creation and editor of Postmodern Environmental Ethics

Ariel Salleh's explanation of how "environmental struggle is socialist struggle is feminist struggle" sets the standard for intersectional study of the crises we face in nature, economy and society - from global climate to household. In her praxis epistemology and labours for repair of the humanity-nature metabolism, we find the most passionate, humbling truths.

Patrick Bond, political economist, University of Witwatersrand School of Governance, South Africa

The combination of eco-socialist, feminist and decolonial perspectives is analytically and politically thrilling. <i>Ecofeminism as Politics</i> offers an integrative understanding of our world, its multiple processes and crises, and possibilities for change.

Ulrich Brand, political scientist, University of Vienna, and co-author of Theorizing the Imperial Mode of Living

Ecofeminism as Politics is now a classic, being the first work to offer a joined-up framework for green, socialist, feminist and postcolonial thinking, showing how these have been held back by conceptual confusions over gender. Originally published in 1997, it argues that ecofeminism reaches beyond contemporary social movement ideologies and practices, by prefiguring a political synthesis of four-revolutions-in-one: ecology is feminism is socialism is postcolonial struggle. Ariel Salleh addresses discourses on class, science, the body, culture and nature, and her innovative reading of Marx converges the philosophy of internal relations with the organic materiality of everyday life.

This new edition features forewords by Indian ecofeminist Vandana Shiva and US philosopher John Clark, a new introduction, and a recent conversation between Salleh and younger scholar activists.

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Updates Ariel Salleh’s landmark exploration of the relationship between feminism and ecology.

Foreword by John Clark

Foreword by Vandana Shiva

Preface to the First Edition

Introduction to the Twentieth Anniversary Edition

Part I: Women and Ecopolitics

1. Ecology Reframes History

2. Ecofeminist Actions

Part II: An Embodied Materialism

3. Body Logic: 1/0 Culture

4. Man/Woman=Nature

5. For and Against Marx

6. The Deepest Contradiction

Part III: Making Postcolonial Sense

7. When Feminism Fails

8. Terra Nullius

9. A Barefoot Epistemology

10. As Energy/Labour Flows

11. Agents of Complexity

12. Beyond Virtual Movements

Interview: Embodied Materialism in Action

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Updates Ariel Salleh’s landmark exploration of the relationship between feminism and ecology.
One of the first works to bridge the feminist and ecology movements.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781786990402
Publisert
2017-08-15
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Zed Books Ltd
Vekt
500 gr
Høyde
214 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
400

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Ariel Salleh is a founding member of the Global University for Sustainability, Hong Kong; Visiting Professor in Culture, Philosophy & Environment, Nelson Mandela University; 2013 Senior Fellow in Post-Growth Societies, Friedrich Schiller University Jena: and Research Associate in Political Economy, University of Sydney.