EcoTechGender – serie
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2 produkter
2 produkter
2 111 kr
Skickas inom 3-6 vardagar
Women’s rights over their own bodies is one of the most pressing issues, esp. as women still seem to have fewer rights over their bodies than men. International authors from philosophy, literature, art, architecture, and gender studies address the topic from a variety of perspectives, reaching beyond classical feminism, and beyond the labels of "motherhood" and "sex." The contributions are grouped into five sections – Body Experiences, History, Technology and Arts, Feminism and Phenomenology, and Beauty. Papers address a multitude of areas, ranging from beauty practices and Ukrainian women refugees in the context of the Russia-Ukraine war, feminist phenomenology and socio-structural critique, female specific neuropathology, the discourse of the Victorian women’s menstruation to "motherhood" in gender studies and feminist new materialisms. The book provides not only a comprehensive overview over the current state of research, but will also inspire further discussions. A separate bibliography listing relevant titles for readers new to the topics and for advanced researchers rounds out the volume.
Women Philosophers and Scientists Against War and Ecocide
The Ukrainian Context
Inbunden, Engelska, 2026
2 067 kr
Kommande
Any war has complex social and ecological consequences. The authors in this volume address many topics from multifacted perspectives, based on experience and history of the Russian invasion into Ukraine, and with an additional focus on women, women philosophers and scientists: Gender and cultural dimensions of war; Ecocide and environmental destruction in Ukraine; Ukrainian women’s roles, identities, and resistance during wartime; sexual and gender-based violence as a weapon of war; urban destruction and cultural reconstruction; environmental and health consequences of war (including the Kakhovka Dam disaster); Ecocide as a global and existential challenge; Ukrainian environmental activism and ecological worldviews; Information warfare and propaganda; Linguistic and cultural representations of ecocide; internet and meme culture in wartime Ukraine; ecofeminist and literary perspectives on war; psychoanalytic and religious interpretations of war and trauma.This makes a book not only a compelling and urgent read; the authors contribute to and advance the research on the interrelationships of war, gender, and ecology, which have mostly been studied separately.