Muddying the Waters Does Not Have to Entail Erosion: Ecological Feminist Concerns with Purity |
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Authors: | Cecilia Herles |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Archaeology, University of Troms?, Troms?, 9037, Norway |
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Abstract: | Ecofeminists call attention to the associations that have been made between woman and nature, which can operate as a source of both subjugation and resistance, exploitation, and inspiration. This paper expands upon feminist critiques of purity by phrasing these concerns in an ecological feminist perspective. This theoretical exercise of problematizing the ideal of purity sheds light upon the intersections of human and nonhuman oppression. Preservationist work has tended to employ the logic of purity by focusing on protection of the purity of the wild regions of the earth from the polluting forces of humanity. However, such approaches retain the troublesome nature/culture dualism. The author illustrates how attempts to fragment and radically separate people from the environment can prove to be highly dangerous. She connects the theoretical resistance to purity to the important activist work that is being done to expose environmental racism. Finally, she discusses how muddying the waters and resisting the logic of purity can offer a promising approach to pressing problems revolving around the intersections of human and nonhuman oppression. |
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Keywords: | ecological feminism ecofeminism purity mestiza consciousness environmental racism |
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