Synopses & Reviews
This book provides a comprehensive overview of feminist and environmental theories of society-environment relations, considers the range of theoretical and political influences on socialist and Marxist theory, amongst others, and the social sciences' turn to poststructuralism and postmodernism. Cudworth also develops her own theoretical account for the interrelations between forms of social domination and contributes to important debates with sociology, social theory, feminist theory and environmentalism.
Synopsis
An original exploration of how the relationship between society and 'nature' is conceptualized, focusing on theories of social exclusion and difference. A comprehensive overview of feminist and environmental theories of society-environment relations, considering the range of theoretical and political influences on such theorizing such as socialist and Marxist theory amongst others and the turn to post structuralism and postmodernism within the social sciences. Cudworth also develops her own theoretical account for the interrelations between forms of social domination and contributes to important debates with sociology, social theory, feminist theory and environmentalism.
About the Author
Erika Cudworth is Senior Lecturer in Politics and Sociology in the School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural Studies at the University of East London. She is author of Environment and Society.
Table of Contents
Introduction * Social Difference and Ecologism * Systems of Complexity: 'Nature', 'Society' and 'Human' Domination * Different Feminisms * Ecofeminism and the Question of Difference * Gender and Nature: Material Relations and Symbolic Regimes * Real Domination in a Lifeworld of Complexity * Bibliography * Index