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Catriona Sandilands [15]Catriona Alison Hayward Sandilands [1]C. Sandilands [1]
  1. Democracy and the Claims of Nature: Critical Perspectives for a New Century.Wilson Carey McWilliams, Bob Pepperman Taylor, Bryan G. Norton, Robyn Eckersley, Joe Bowersox, J. Baird Callicott, Catriona Sandilands, John Barry, Andrew Light, Peter S. Wenz, Luis A. Vivanco, Tim Hayward, John O'Neill, Robert Paehlke, Timothy W. Luke, Robert Gottlieb & Charles T. Rubin (eds.) - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In Democracy and the Claims of Nature, the leading thinkers in the fields of environmental, political, and social theory come together to discuss the tensions and sympathies of democratic ideals and environmental values. The prominent contributors reflect upon where we stand in our understanding of the relationship between democracy and the claims of nature. Democracy and the Claims of Nature bridges the gap between the often competing ideals of the two fields, leading to a greater understanding of each for the (...)
     
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  2.  34
    Raising Your Hand in the Council of all Beings: Ecofeminism and Citizenship.C. Sandilands - 1999 - Ethics and the Environment 4 (2):219-233.
  3. Desiring nature, queering ethics.Catriona Sandilands - 2001 - Environmental Ethics 23 (2):169-188.
    I begin from the premise that “environmentalism needs queers.” Given that desire is a significant element in environmental ethics, and that the social organization of sexual-erotic desire has important impacts on human-nonhuman interactions, queer theory promises to aid environmental thought in unraveling and challenging some of these relations. I contribute the following elements to that challenge:the social-sexual organization of natural space; the organizing effects of dominant discourses of reproductive sexuality for both political possibility and bodily experience; and the retrieval (using (...)
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  4.  28
    Eco Homo.Catriona Sandilands - 2003 - Social Philosophy Today 19:17-39.
    This paper raises the issue of governmentality in popular environmental understandings of the (human) body. Understood as object-subjects of environmental management, “ecological bodies politic” are increasingly produced and organized by disciplinary discourses that have the (ironic) effect of reifying, enclosing and surveilling corporeal experiences in the world, especially for bodies deemed unruly. This paper thus deploys queer theories of corporeal materialization (Butler), and queer histories of corporeal-ecological abjection, toward a political account of embodiment oriented to creative opening and transgression, rather (...)
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  5.  53
    Eco Homo.Catriona Sandilands - 2003 - Social Philosophy Today 19:17-39.
    This paper raises the issue of governmentality in popular environmental understandings of the (human) body. Understood as object-subjects of environmental management, “ecological bodies politic” are increasingly produced and organized by disciplinary discourses that have the (ironic) effect of reifying, enclosing and surveilling corporeal experiences in the world, especially for bodies deemed unruly. This paper thus deploys queer theories of corporeal materialization (Butler), and queer histories of corporeal-ecological abjection, toward a political account of embodiment oriented to creative opening and transgression, rather (...)
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  6.  13
    Eco Homo.Catriona Sandilands - 2003 - Social Philosophy Today 19:17-39.
    This paper raises the issue of governmentality in popular environmental understandings of the (human) body. Understood as object-subjects of environmental management, “ecological bodies politic” are increasingly produced and organized by disciplinary discourses that have the (ironic) effect of reifying, enclosing and surveilling corporeal experiences in the world, especially for bodies deemed unruly. This paper thus deploys queer theories of corporeal materialization (Butler), and queer histories of corporeal-ecological abjection, toward a political account of embodiment oriented to creative opening and transgression, rather (...)
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  7.  58
    From natural identity to radical democracy.Catriona Sandilands - 1995 - Environmental Ethics 17 (1):75-91.
    Environmentalism is traversed by a dilemma between a movement toward identity politics and the impossibility of a speaking natural subject; this dilemma calls into question both the relevance of identity politics for ecological struggle and dominant classical constructions of the subject itself. Using Lacanianinspired insights on subjectivity, and the works of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe on radical democracy, I investigate the alternative versions of the subject implicit in ecological discourses and suggest that it is through these alternatives that environmentalism (...)
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  8.  32
    Making Kin, Making Trouble: Donna Haraway’s Critical Ongoingness.Catriona Sandilands - 2017 - Annals of Science 74 (4):326-330.
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  9.  19
    Ecocritique. [REVIEW]Catriona Sandilands - 1999 - Environmental Ethics 21 (2):209-211.
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  10.  14
    Undomesticated Ground. [REVIEW]Catriona Sandilands - 2002 - Environmental Ethics 24 (3):333-334.
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  11.  7
    Undomesticated Ground. [REVIEW]Catriona Sandilands - 2002 - Environmental Ethics 24 (3):333-334.
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