From Donna Haraway to Stacy Alaimo and modern movements of the present day, Anna Titov delves into the emergence and pervading relevance of ecofeminism…
CLASS DESCRIPTION
The term 'ecofeminism' first emerged in the 1970s, developed from second-wave feminist scholarship and its burgeoning recognition of the alignment of the patriarchally-motivated oppression of nature and its mirrored oppression of women, and becoming a branch of study that allows the exploration of human domination of the Earth with regards to societal domination of oppressed peoples. As the field progresses, it becomes clear that the objective of ecofeminist theorising does not linger solely on why patriarchal power structures place women and nature in a unanimously oppressed space, but also how women can reshape their position as a catalysing force to radically re-evaluate humanity’s relationship to nature overall when faced with the need for critical action in the midst of the Anthropocene.
This lecture will focus on the way in which ecofeminist theories understand this inherent relationality of women to nature and explore it closer through the method that all humans interact with the world around them, on the material/physical plane, i.e. through their embodied experience of the world. We will familiarise ourselves with and examine the works of ecofeminist and posthumanist theorists such as Donna Haraway, Stacey Alaimo, Elizabeth Grosz, Greta Gaard and more, exploring alongside them the philosophical structure of embodiment and how it fosters a connectivity between the human and nature through acknowledging that our bodies are as much part of the world as they belong to us. We will look at how this idea inspires ecofeminist reimaginings of women's place in the world, how this idea is rejected in favour of a radical separation of the concept of 'natural' as it is applied to humanity as an oppressive tool, and how ecofeminism over the years has developed to include those oppressed on the basis of class, race or sexuality as a wider investigation into the ways in which nature and our bodies are dominated under patriarchy.
This lecture will include a visual component exploring the ways in which embodiment features in artists’ practices that investigate women and nature in an ecofeminist lens, such as Francesca Woodman, Claude Cahun, Tacita Dean, Georgia O'Keeffe and Ithell Colquhoun.
ABOUT OUR LECTURER
Anna Titov is a writer and researcher in continental philosophy. She is pursuing a PhD at the University of East Anglia, focussing on notions of subjective physical experience in the wake of a waning natural world. Her areas of interest are Nietzsche, phenomenology, deep ecology, and esoteric spiritualities.
She completed an MA in Continental Philosophy at Warwick in 2021, with a dissertation that looked at trans-anthropocentrism in Nietzsche's middle writings. Her areas of interest are phenomenology, embodied philosophy, and esoteric spiritualities.
Instagram: @aatitov
UPCOMING SESSIONS WITH THE FEMINIST LECTURE PROGRAM
Monday 16th September
Kitty Underhill (she/her)
Where do Flaws Come From?: Bellies, Bodies and the Social Construction of Imperfection
Monday 23rd September
N.A. Kimber (she/her) and K.E. Donoghue-Stanford (she/her)
Death and the Maiden: Femininity in the Gothic
Monday 30th September
Carolina Hades (she/her)
Pole Dancing Against the Algorithm
Monday 7th October
Janine Francois (she/they)
Black {Gendered} Space Time: From the Heavens to Outer Space
Monday 14th October
Parumveer Walia (he/him)
Staged Bodies: Performativity in Feminist Photography
Monday 21st October
Isobel Atacus (she/they)
Eva Hesse: Imagining the Unruly
Monday 28th October
Gudrun Filipska (she/her)
Feminism and Zombie Culture
Monday 4th November
Anna Titov (she/her)
Cyborgs, Transcorporeality and Volatile Bodies: Ecofeminist Theories of Embodiment
Monday 11th November
Jennifer Higgie (she/her)
Stars in Their Eyes: 19th-Century Spiritualism and Female Proto-Surrealism
Monday 18th November
Melissa Baksh (she/her)
Whitewashed? Whiteness and Femininity in Art History
Monday 25th November
Dr. Noam Yadin Evron (she/her)
Hildegard of Bingen: Mystic, Artist, Composer, Pioneer
Monday 2nd December
COMING SOON
Monday 9th December
Baylee Woodley (they/them)
Medieval Femmes: Queer Femininities in Medieval England
Monday 16th December
Summer Lee (she/her)
The Incendiary History of Red Lingerie
RECORDING
A recording of the lecture will be sent out by The Feminist Lecture Program after the event finishes, within 2 hours of the end of the class. This email will also contain any resources/reading list the lecturer shares.
Please add hello@feministlectureprogram.com to your email contacts to ensure you receive the recording as expected.
Please note that the recording will expire 7 days after sending.
PAY WHAT YOU CAN
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