- Ariel Salleh
Ariel Salleh is an Australian
sociologist who writes onsocial ecology andecofeminism . In contrast to idealist ecofeminisms coming fromphilosophy andcultural studies , Salleh's analysis is close to that of fellow sociologistsMaria Mies inGermany and Mary Mellor in theUnited Kingdom . Reproductive labour and use value are central themes here. Her own "embodied materialism" addresses resistance toglobalisation through the movement of movements, introducing the term "meta-industrial labour" to integrate indigenous, peasant, women's, and worker politics under the banner of ecology.Her book "Ecofeminism as Politics: nature, Marx and the postmodern" outlines the scope of a materialist ecofeminism, proposing a transdisciplinary analysis of the embodied roots of capitalist patriarchal globalisation. Salleh traces the effects of what she sees as the "originary contradiction": economic resourcing of labour (women's bodies in the first instance) "as nature" and the eurocentric ideology of "humanity v nature" used to justify that systemic exploitation.
Salleh exemplifies the marxist argument that hands-on praxis is essential to grounded political theory. She was a convener of the Movement Against Uranium Mining in Sydney, 1976, and helped found The Greens in 1985. She worked on the 1992
Earth Summit with Women's Environment & Development Organization; on local catchment struggles in the mid 90s; and from 2001-04 acted as ecologist/critic on the Australian federal government's Gene Technology Ethics Committee.As a co-editor of the international journal "Capitalism Nature Socialism", Ariel Salleh works at en/gendering dialogue between advocates of ecofeminist and eco-socialist politics. Her writing has addressed this terrain since the early 1980s and she was an original signatory to the 2001 'Eco-socialist Manifesto'. Her critical studies of green thought, environmental ethics, and ecopolitics, run to some 100 articles and chapters. She lectures on ecofeminism internationally.
elected works
*(2006)' Edited Symposium: ‘Ecosocialist-Ecofeminist Dialogues’', "Capitalism Nature Socialism", 17 (4): 32-124.
*(2006) ‘We in the North are the Biggest Problem for the South: A Conversation with Hilkka Pietila’, "Capitalism Nature Socialism", 17 (1): 44-61.
*(2006) ‘Social Ecology and the Man Question’ in Piers Stephens, John Barry, and Andrew Dobson (eds.), "Contemporary Environmental Politics". London: Routledge.
*(2005) ‘Deeper than Deep Ecology’ in Baird Callicott and Clare Palmer (eds.), "Environmental Philosophy", Vols. 1-5. London: Routledge.
*(2005) 'Editorial: 'Towards an Embodied Materialism", "Capitalism Nature Socialism", 16 (2): 9-14.
*(2005) ‘Class, Race, and Gender Discourse in the Ecofeminism/Deep Ecology Debate’ in Linda Kalof and Terre Satterfield (eds.), "Environmental Values". London: Earthscan.
*(2004) ‘Global Alternatives and the Meta-Industrial Class’ in Robert Albritton et al (eds.), "New Socialisms: Futures Beyond Globalization". New York: Routledge.
*(2001) ‘Ecofeminism’ in Victor Taylor and Charles Winquist (eds.), "The Postmodern Encyclopaedia". London: Routledge.
*(2001) 'Interview with Maria Mies: ‘Women, Nature, and the International Division of Labour’', in Veronika Bennoldt-Thomsen et al (eds.), "There Is An Alternative". London: Zed Books.
*(2001) ‘Sustaining Nature or Sustaining Marx? Reply to John Foster and Paul Burkett’, "Organization & Environment", 1: 43-450.
*(1999) 'Dialogue with Meira Hanson: ‘On Production and Reproduction, Identity and Non-identity’', "Organization & Environment", 12: 207-218.
*(1997) "Ecofeminism as Politics: nature, Marx and the postmodern". London: Zed Books and New York: St Martins Press.
*(1996) ‘Politics in/of the Wilderness’, "Arena", 23: 26-30.
*(1994) ‘Nature, Woman, Labor, Capital’ in Martin O'Connor (ed.), "Is Capitalism Sustainable?" New York: Guilford.
*(1993) ‘Earth Summit: reflections on our political times’, "Ecofeminist Newsletter", 4: 6-8.
*(1991) ‘Eco-socialism/ecofeminism’, "Capitalism Nature Socialism", 2: 129-134.
*(1991) ‘Essentialism - and ecofeminism’, "Arena", 94: 167-173.
*(1990) ‘The Politics of Representation’, "Arena", 91: 163-169.ources
* [http://www.uws.edu.au Associate Professor Ariel Salleh, Arts, Education & Social Sciences, University of Western Sydney] ]
* [http://www.ArielSalleh.net Ariel Salleh Home page]
* Salleh, Ariel, "Ecofeminism as Politics" (London: Zed Books and New York: Palgrave, 1997)
* Reviews by John Barry (1998) Environmental Politics; by Paul Burkett (2001) New Political Science
* [http://www.cnsjournal.org Capitalism Nature Socialism]
* [http://www.ecofem.org Ecofeminism website, Lancaster University, UK]
* [http://www.WLOE.org Women and Life on Earth Project]
* [http://www.yorku.ca/cnsconf/york_IPPE_2005.pdf International Political Economy and Ecology Summer School, York University, Canada, 2005.]
* [http://www.ecoeco.org/pdf/Newsletter_2007_Jan.pdf newsletter of the International Society for Ecological Ethics]
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