Temps de lecture : 8 minutes
References
↑1 | While Françoise D’Eaubonne is considered the first to have theorized “ecofeminism”, it is essential to recall the pre-existence of practices respectful of the feminine gender and of nature within the women’s communities of the Global South, or certain Inidigenous communities, particularly the matrilineal ones. The Iroquoian or Haudenosaunee community, which includes several Iroquoian-speaking nations and who historically lived in upstate New York, south of Lake Ontario and/or the St. Lawrence River, is an example. In addition, within this community whose filiation is matrilineal, women occupy a prominent place in the political functioning of society, and in particular, in decision-making, for the management of both the community and nature, and the mutual harmony between them. |
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↑2 | We are referring here to the toxic attributes of hegemonic masculinity. |
↑3 | To go further see: Vielle, Pascale et Alain Henry. « L’écoféminisme, une perspective pour penser la crise de notre système? », Sociétés en Changement, (9), 8, 2020 ; Plumwoods, Val. Feminism and the Mastery of Nature, Routledge, 1993 ; Falquet, Jacques. et al. Ecologie : quand les femmes comptent, L’Harmattan, 2002; Carolyn Merchants. The Death of Nature: Woman, Ecology and the Scientific Revolution, Harper and Row, 1980; Shiva Vandana. Staying Alive. Women, Ecology and Development, Zed Books, 1994 [1989]. |
↑4 | The original leitmotif is, in Spanish: “Ni las mujeres ni la tierra somos territorios de conquista! “. On this subject, see the documentary produced by Allard, Marine, Lucie Assemat, Coline Dhaussy. “Neither the women nor the earth! », 2018: http://www.film-documentaire.fr/4DACTION/w_fiche_film/56204_1. |
↑5 | Mujeres Creando . |
↑6 | The original leitmotif is, in Spanish: “Ni las mujeres ni la tierra somos territorios de conquista! “. On this subject, see the documentary directed by Marine Allard, Lucie Assemat, Coline Dhaussy. “Neither the women nor the earth! », 2018: http://www.film-documentaire.fr/4DACTION/w_fiche_film/56204_1. |
↑7 | The Age that geologists and biologists call “Anthropocene” (Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer) means “the Age of the human”. This corresponds to the idea that humans have become the main actors on Earth, capable of modifying the environment and taking control of it. To go further see: Magny, Michel, “Aux racines de l’Anthropocène – Une crise écologique reflet d’une crise de l’Homme”, 2019, Quaternaire. Revue de l’Association française pour l’étude du Quaternaire, 30(1), p. 113-114. |
↑8 | Plumwood, Val, “Ecofeminism: An overview and discussion of positions and arguments”.1986, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 64(sup1), 120-138 ; Plumwood, Val, Feminism and the Mastery of Nature. New York and London: Routledge, 1993; Françoise D’Eaubonne, Le féminisme ou la mort, Pierre Horay, 1974 ; Shiva Vandana. Staying Alive. Women, Ecology and Development, Zed Books, 1994 [1989] ; Warren, Karen, Ecofeminism: Women, Culture, Nature. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1997. |
↑9 | Ecofeminism(s) have been noted in the plural in this article for inclusive purposes so as to include all ecofeminist movements, thoughts and theories. This postulate thus believes in the plurality of ways of being ecofeminist, by associating with it the will to get rid of universalizing thoughts, and to think of a system that would include a wider range of ways of being, thinking and feeling. See to this effect:Hébert, Ève-Laurence, « Faire partie du monde: réflexions écoféministes », 2017, Politique et Sociétés 38(2), de Collectif Montréal, Les éditions du remue-ménage,p. 179-182; Vo, Mathilde, “Ecoféminismes”, Institut du Genre en Géopolitique, 2020 : <https://igg-geo.org/?p=964> |
↑10 | Burgart Goutal, Jeanne, “Déconstruire le « carno-phallogocentrisme » : l’écoféminisme comme critique de la rationalité occidentale”, 2016, Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne, 11(1). |
↑11 | Wohlschies, Romane, “Écoféminismes : outils pour penser l’humanité post-COVID”, Institut du Genre en Géopolitique, 2022. |
↑12 | Simone De Beauvoir, Le deuxième sexe. Gallimard, 1949. |
↑13 | Karen J. Warren, “The power and the promise of ecological feminism”, 1998 [1990], Environmental Philosophy. From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology, M. Zimmerman ed., p. 325-345. |
↑14 | Burgart Goutal, Jeanne, Être écoféministe, théories et pratiques. Edition de l’Échappée, 2020, p. 128. |
↑15 | Descola, Philippe, Par-delà nature et culture, Éditions Gallimard, 2005. |
↑16 | Larrère, Catherine, La nature a-t-elle un genre? Variétés d´écoféminisme, Ed L´Harmattan, Cahiers du Genre, 2015/2 No. 59, pp 103-125. En ligne : <https://www.cairn.info/revue-cahiers-du-genre-2015-2-page-103.htm>. Consulté le 11/12/2021. |
↑17 | Tissot, Damien, « Le Souci de la nature. Écoféminismes et éthiques du care. », 67 Multitudes 67, 2017: <https://www.multitudes.net/le-souci-de-la-nature-ecofeminismes-et-ethiques-du-care/>. |