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In the summer of 1993, activists set up a peace camp blocking a logging road into an extensive area of temperate rainforest in Clayoquot Sound that was slated for clear-cutting. Twenty-odd years later, Clayoquot holds a prominent place in environmental discourse, yet it is not generally associated with feminist or eco/feminist movements.The Changing Nature of Eco/Feminism argues that Clayoquot offers a potent site for examining a whole range of feminist issues. Through a careful study of eco/feminist activism against clear-cut logging practices in British Columbia, the book explores how a transnational eco/feminist practice insisted on an account of logging situated in histories of colonialism, holding the Canadian state to account for its deforestation practices. Moore demonstrates that the sheer vitality of eco/feminist politics at the Peace Camp in the summer of 1993 confounded dominant narratives of contemporary feminism and has re-imagined eco/feminist politics for new times.
Niamh Moore is a Chancellor's Fellow in sociology at the University of Edinburgh.
Preface: "She Goes On and On and On"1 Rethinking Eco/Feminism through Clayoquot Sound2 Eco/Feminist Genealogies: Essentialism, Universalism, and Telling (Trans)national Histories3 Eco/Feminism and the Question of Nature4 Clayoquot Histories: Our Home and Native Land?5 "It was like a war zone": The Clayoquot Peace Camp and the Gendered Politics of (Non)Violence6 Mothers, Grandmothers, and Other Queers in Eco/Feminist Activism7 Romanticizing the (Gendered) Nature of Childhood?8 Unnatural Histories: Mother Nature, Family Trees, and Other Human-Nature Relationships9 Eco/Feminism and the Changing Nature of FeminismAppendixNotesReferencesIndex