Ecowomanism at the Panama Canal


Black Women, Labor, and Environmental Ethics

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By Sofia Betancourt
Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
162

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Description

Sofia Betancourt is associate dean for academic affairs at Drew University's Theological School.

Chapter 1: Ecowomanism at the Panama Canal Chapter 2: Geography, Countermemory, and Resistance Chapter 3: The Silver Sisters: Ecocreolization at the Panama Canal Chapter 4: Dignity and Striving: An Ecowomanist Moral Anthropology

Using the voices of displaced women on the Panama Canal, Betancourt develops a robust ecowomanist moral anthropology based on dignity, relationality, and environmental justice. She takes the early work of ecowomanism to its next stage and invites us to join her in the challenge of stopping the environmental devastation that threatens us all. A compelling new primer for environmental justice. -- Emilie M. Townes, Vanderbilt University Sofia Betancourt's account of ecocreolization - shared understandings of self forged across generations and communities in the face of violence and displacement - is at once a necessary intervention in North American environmental thought and a tremendously hopeful reception of ancestral wisdom for "surviving the unimaginable". -- Willis Jenkins, University of Virginia Ecowomanism at the Panama Canal is a healing balm in this time of climate disruption. Reclaiming the power of inherited and indigenous environmental cultures, Betancourt constructs a transnational ecowomanist ethic that holds humanity accountable, recognizes moral authority in the non-human world and offers us new hope. A deep, thought-provoking and insightful voice in ecowomanist thought, Betancourt guides us along the path of undoing harm, and recommitting our hearts to the work and practice of earth justice. -- Melanie Harris, Wake Forest University and Author of Ecowomanism Betancourt's transnational ecowomanist method illustrates artistry and vibrancy with its fresh insights and tracing of deep connective moral memory, mapped across diverse scholarly interrogations of culture and experiential histories of laborers. The intercultural vision of black decoloniality centered on Panama reveals an ethics of "ecocreolization" highlighting black women's ritual practices, sexual embodiment, and innovation. This is a stunning expansion of the womanist canon. -- Traci C. West, Drew University

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