Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Intersectional disgust? Animals and (eco)feminism

View through CrossRef
This paper explores tensions between feminisms on the issue of nonhuman animals. The possibility of a posthuman or more-than-human account of intersectionality is explored through the retelling of an encounter with a feminist academic colleague and her experience of disgust toward a book I was carrying (Animals and Women: Feminist Theoretical Explorations, Adams and Donovan, 1995). I argue that such disgust responses can be read as the affective embodiment of unacknowledged human/animal hierarchy and act to impede intersectional theory and politics. Moreover this disgust response is paradigmatic of a certain feminist disavowal of ecofeminism misread as a stereotypical representation of essentialist thinking. Reversing this I argue that it is humanist disgust rather than ecofeminism that may be seen as ‘out of date’ especially when one appreciates how the more-than-human have come to occupy a significant place in both feminist work and the broader humanities and social sciences. In conclusion the paper claims that feminist engagement with nonhuman animals is entirely consistent with its multi-faceted interrogation of dualist ontology, and, whilst the ethics of this engagement may be complex, it is no longer tenable for feminist work to exclude nonhuman animals from its understanding of sociality, politics or ethics.
Title: Intersectional disgust? Animals and (eco)feminism
Description:
This paper explores tensions between feminisms on the issue of nonhuman animals.
The possibility of a posthuman or more-than-human account of intersectionality is explored through the retelling of an encounter with a feminist academic colleague and her experience of disgust toward a book I was carrying (Animals and Women: Feminist Theoretical Explorations, Adams and Donovan, 1995).
I argue that such disgust responses can be read as the affective embodiment of unacknowledged human/animal hierarchy and act to impede intersectional theory and politics.
Moreover this disgust response is paradigmatic of a certain feminist disavowal of ecofeminism misread as a stereotypical representation of essentialist thinking.
Reversing this I argue that it is humanist disgust rather than ecofeminism that may be seen as ‘out of date’ especially when one appreciates how the more-than-human have come to occupy a significant place in both feminist work and the broader humanities and social sciences.
In conclusion the paper claims that feminist engagement with nonhuman animals is entirely consistent with its multi-faceted interrogation of dualist ontology, and, whilst the ethics of this engagement may be complex, it is no longer tenable for feminist work to exclude nonhuman animals from its understanding of sociality, politics or ethics.

Related Results

Jekyll and Hyde revisited: Young people's constructions of feminism, feminists and the practice of “reasonable feminism”
Jekyll and Hyde revisited: Young people's constructions of feminism, feminists and the practice of “reasonable feminism”
It is a decade and a half since Nigel Edley and Margaret Wetherell's (2001) “Jekyll and Hyde: Men's constructions of feminism and feminists” called scholarly attention to men's dis...
The Eco-space and Female Agency in Bole Butake’s Lake God
The Eco-space and Female Agency in Bole Butake’s Lake God
Abstract The ever-increasing environmental crises and the subsequent decay of the earth is a veritable call for concern which has stimulated man’s consciousness vis-à-vis his own v...
The imagination of eco-disaster: Post-disaster rebuilding in Asian cinema
The imagination of eco-disaster: Post-disaster rebuilding in Asian cinema
Commercial films today often reduce representations of natural catastrophes to commodified spectacles that de-contextualize the subject matter. To contemporary film viewers, the ‘p...
Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history
Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history
Building on historical narrative and social-theoretical analysis, Fraser explores the place of second-wave feminism in relation to three specific moments in the history of capitali...
Formation of an innovation-pedagogical actor in the school environment
Formation of an innovation-pedagogical actor in the school environment
Introduction. The need to develop and test a complex of psychological-pedagogical tools for the development of an innovation actor is due to the priorities of the national policy i...
Young feminists, feminism and digital media
Young feminists, feminism and digital media
Over recent years, young feminist activism has assumed prominence in mainstream media where news headlines herald the efforts of schoolgirls in fighting sexism, sexual violence and...
Eco-media: art informed by developments in ecology, media technology and environmental science
Eco-media: art informed by developments in ecology, media technology and environmental science
In the twenty-first century, there has been a resurgence of ecologically conscious art among artists using new technologies. Like Eco-art, this recent movement, which might be call...
Jekyll and Hyde: Men's Constructions of Feminism and Feminists
Jekyll and Hyde: Men's Constructions of Feminism and Feminists
Research and commentary on men's responses to feminism have demonstrated the range of ways in which men have mobilized both for and against feminist principles. This article argues...

Recent Results

Calligraphie arabe
Calligraphie arabe
Musée de la calligraphie arabe., Arabic Calligraphy, 1977, Association française d'action artistique...
Claude Monet
Claude Monet
Ann Temkin, Water lilies in art, 2009, Museum of Modern Art...

Back to Top