User:The Vintage Feminist/Material feminism (subject)

To include the following

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Books

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  • Hekman, Susan; Alaimo, Stacy (2008). Material feminisms. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253219466.


Professor of english at the University of Texas at Arlington, Stacy Alamo, describes the way in which matter and nature related across a number of disciplines including feminism, "This chapter introduces some of the theoretical models, questions, and arguments of the book, focusing on how feminist corporeal theory, disability studies, environmental humanities, and science studies productively engage with the materiality of human bodies and nonhuman natures."[1] "The material turn is by no means exclusive to feminist theory. New conceptions of materiality that are neither biologically reductive nor strictly social constructionist are emerging in many disciplines: environmental philosophy, corporeal feminism, disability studies, transgender theory, science studies, animal studies, new media studies, race theory, and other areas."[2]



  • Alaimo, Stacy (2010), "Genetics, material agency, and the evolution of posthuman environmental ethics in science fiction", Bodily natures science, environment, and the material self, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, ISBN 9780253004833

Journal articles

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Reply
Davis, Noela (February 2009). "New materialism and feminism's anti-biologism: a response to Sara Ahmed". European Journal of Women's Studies. 16 (1): 67–80. doi:10.1177/1350506808098535. S2CID 145331657.



  1. ^ Alaimo, Stacy (2010), "Bodily natures", Bodily natures: science, environment, and the material self, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, p. 2, ISBN 9780253004833
  2. ^ Alaimo, Stacy (2010), "Bodily natures", Bodily natures: science, environment, and the material self, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, p. 7, ISBN 9780253004833