Karen J. Warren (Ed)

Introduction
Karen J. Warren
PART I
Taking Empirical Data Seriously
One: Taking Empirical Data Seriously:
An Ecofeminist Philosophical Perspective
Karen J. Warren
Two: Ecofeminism through an
Anticolonial Framework
Andy Smith
Three: Women of Color, Environmental Justice, and Ecofeminism
Dorceta E. Taylor
Four: Women's Knowledge as Expert Knowledge:
Indian Women and Ecodevelopment
Deane Curtin
Five: Epistemic Responsibility and the Inuit of
Canada's Eastern Arctic: An Ecofeminist Appraisal
Douglas J. Buege
Six: Women and Power
Petra Kelly
Seven: Learning to Live with Differences:
The Challenge of Ecofeminist Community
Judith Plant
Eight: "The Earth Is the Indian's
Mother,
Nhandecy"
Eliane Potiguara
(Translated by Leland Robert Guyer; edited by Karen J. Warren)
PART II
Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Nine: Leisure: Celebration and Resistance in the Ecofeminist Quilt
Karen M. Fox
Ten: Ecofeminism and Work
Robert Alan Sessions
Eleven: Ecofeminism and Children
Ruthanne Kurth-Schai
Twelve: Ecofeminism and Meaning
Susan Griffin
Thirteen: Ecofeminist Literary Criticism
Gretchen T. Legler
Fourteen: Rhetoric, Rape, and Ecowarfare in the Persian Gulf
Adrienne Elizabeth Christiansen
Fifteen: The Nature of Race: Discourses of Racial Difference in Ecofeminism
Noel Sturgeon
Sixteen: Ecofeminism in Kenya:
A Chemical Engineer's Perspective
Joseph R. Loer
Seventeen: Keeping the Soil in Good Heart: Women
Weeders, the Environment, and Ecofeminism
Candice Bradley
Eighteen: Remediating Development through an
Ecofeminist Lens
Betty Wells and Danielle Wirth
Nineteen: Scientific Ecology and Ecological
Feminism: The Potential for Dialogue
Catherine Zabinski
PART III
Philosophical Perspectives
Twenty: Androcentrism and Anthropocentrism:
Parallels and Politics
Val Plumwood
Twenty -one: Revaluing Nature
Lori Gruen
Twenty-two: Self and Community in
Environmental Ethics
Wendy Donner
Twenty-three: Kant and Ecofeminism
Holyn Wilson
Twenty-four: Women-Animals-Machines:
A Grammar for a Wittgensteinian Ecofeminism
Wendy Lee-Lampshire
Twenty-five: Radical Nonduality
Ecofeminist Philosophy
Charlene Spretnak
Karen J. Warren, Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Macalester College is editor of Ecological Feminist Philosophies and coeditor (with Duane L. Cady) of Bringing Peace Home.
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