Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Feminist Ecological Pacifism and Care in the Anthropocene
View through CrossRef
Abstract
The shared materiality of all living entities on the planet and their connectivity becomes an invitation to rethink pacifism to explore new forms of being in the world. This paper asks how we can think about the environment, violence, and pacifism when the older conceptions of violence do not capture all of its complex and interrelational features in the Anthropocene. Feminist new materialism moves away from anthropocentrism and offers an alternative trajectory for thinking about the environment and practicing pacifism in light of environmental, slow, and epistemic violence. It emphasises that since we are always already part of the world and thereby ethically responsible for the intra-actions we share with all beings, we bear a ‘response-ability’ (Barad 2012, 206–207). As a radical theory and practice, feminist environmental pacifism makes visible the violent socio-political complexities of human – nature connections and suggests caring about earthly co-existence with all beings.
Title: Feminist Ecological Pacifism and Care in the Anthropocene
Description:
Abstract
The shared materiality of all living entities on the planet and their connectivity becomes an invitation to rethink pacifism to explore new forms of being in the world.
This paper asks how we can think about the environment, violence, and pacifism when the older conceptions of violence do not capture all of its complex and interrelational features in the Anthropocene.
Feminist new materialism moves away from anthropocentrism and offers an alternative trajectory for thinking about the environment and practicing pacifism in light of environmental, slow, and epistemic violence.
It emphasises that since we are always already part of the world and thereby ethically responsible for the intra-actions we share with all beings, we bear a ‘response-ability’ (Barad 2012, 206–207).
As a radical theory and practice, feminist environmental pacifism makes visible the violent socio-political complexities of human – nature connections and suggests caring about earthly co-existence with all beings.
Related Results
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere is a monograph that argues for a fundamental reorientation of constitutional law around the realities of biospheric interdep...
Feminist Journalism
Feminist Journalism
Feminists have always used whatever communication and media technologies are available to help them collect and disseminate news about feminism and women’s issues, and to offer the...
Pacifism and Nonviolence: Discerning the Contours of an Emerging Multidisciplinary Research Agenda
Pacifism and Nonviolence: Discerning the Contours of an Emerging Multidisciplinary Research Agenda
Abstract
Pacifism and nonviolence have separable foci and origins, yet also share important similarities, and their respective histories are mutually imbricated. Both have, further...
The Hybrid Breeding of Nanomedia
The Hybrid Breeding of Nanomedia
IntroductionIf human beings have become a geophysical force, capable of impacting the very crust and atmosphere of the planet, and if geophysical forces become objects of study, pr...
Defining the Anthropocene for the greatest good as an Event-based Renaissance
Defining the Anthropocene for the greatest good as an Event-based Renaissance
Paul Crutzen’s concept of the Anthropocene in Nature in 2002 stressed that “a daunting task [lay] ahead for scientists and engineers to guide society towards en...
Feminist Historical Geography
Feminist Historical Geography
Feminist approaches reconstruct experience, privilege the everyday and embodied as a unit of analysis, and therefore foreground the significance of scale in geographical analyses. ...
Children & the Chthulu: What child-authored books reveal about the Anthropocene
Children & the Chthulu: What child-authored books reveal about the Anthropocene
This research sheds light on Indian children’s process of meaning-making of the Anthropocene using place-ecological meaning. It explores how children creatively expressed their und...

