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E-raamat: Ecological and Social Healing: Multicultural Women's Voices

Edited by (Naropa University)
  • Formaat: 252 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Apr-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040339282
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  • Formaat: 252 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Apr-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040339282

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A compendium of diverse women and nonbinary femmes, the second, expanded edition of this book highlights the contributors’ journeys with straddling social and ecological issues through both their professional and personal paths and reveals how straddling these edges has surfaced new learning, models, and practices for collective healing. The contributors span multiple generations and positionalities and are prominent academics, writers, teachers, artists, leaders, and healers. Ecological and Social Healing is rooted in the power of integrating multiple and often conflicting views and the transformations that result.

This book is rooted in academic theory as well as personal and professional experience and highlights emerging models and insights. It will appeal to those working, teaching, and learning in the fields of social justice, environmental issues, women and gender studies, animal rights, ecopsychology, spirituality, transformative studies, transdisciplinarity, leadership, and interdisciplinary/intersectionality studies, as well as anyone straddling the boundaries of gender, race, ecology, and the crises of our times and are looking for new ways of being.



A compendium of diverse women and nonbinary femmes, the second, expanded edition of this book highlights the contributor’s journeys with straddling social and ecological issues through both their professional and personal paths and reveals how straddling these edges has surfaced new learning, models, and practices for collective healing.

Arvustused

Jeanine Canty brings us one of those rare and priceless books that free us from conventional reality and, in so doing, illumine our own gifts for personal and collective healing. Like a clarion call to affirm the authority of our often-marginalized experience, Cantys powerful essay, along with the womens voices she has assembled here, thrills me with the challenge to see and act in new ways. The intellectual excitement as well as the emotional grounding that I find in this collection charge my life with a sense of truth and adventure.

Joanna Macy, author, Coming Back to Life

Ecological and Social Healing is a transformative collection of womens voices whose pain, passion, and resilience are a representation of millions of women whose stories are powerful interventions that interrupt a master narrative and shape what it means to live in a diverse, inclusive, and ecological world. Their stories offer hope for ecological and social healing beginning with self, transformed into social praxis. A must-read to further understand ourselves in a complex relationship with our natural and social environments.

Suzanne Benally, executive director, Swift Foundation

Ecological and Social Healing is one of the most inspiring and beautifully conceived compendium of texts by formidable women writers and scholars on the most salient and urgent issues of our troubled Anthropocene. It is a clarion call, an imperative, a spiritual crossroads for understanding and appreciating our interconnectedness and indebtedness to one another and the more-than-human. From explications of the profound spiritual traditions of Navajo and Filipino cultures, to talk of restructuring our global economy and so much more, this compelling book teems with antidotes to living in a dark, paralyzed, wounded time. Let us gather and absorb the gnosis here and act on it. Many kudos to editor Jeanine M. Canty for moving our century forward.

Anne Waldman, poet

We often speak of books breaking new ground. Ecological and Social Healing heals it. It asks us all to reconnect areas of life that have been falsely divided to (re)discover the wisdom necessary to bear witness to the pain of the societal disconnect that has led to the degradation of our collective habitat. Only from that place of honoring can true healing begin. It is more than just reclaiming the feminine and the indigenous. It is reclaiming the whole.

Rev. angel Kyodo williams, Sensei

AcknowledgementsList of Contributors

Introduction
Jeanine M. Canty

Part 1: Clear Seeing
Dekaaz One
Rachel Bagby

1. Finding Hope at the Margins: A Journey of Environmental Justice
Ana I. Baptista

2. Sustainability and the Soul
Susan Griffin

3. Seeing Clearly through Cracked Lenses
Jeanine M. Canty

4. American Indian Women and the Violence of Extractive Industries
Adrienne Benally

Part 2: Intertwined
Dekaaz Two
Rachel Bagby

5. Piercing the Shell of Privilege: How My Commitments to Environmental,
Gender, and Racial Justice Moved from My Head to My Heart
Nina Simons

6. Living Kind: A Spiritual and Political Journey
Alka Arora

7. Waters of Resistance: Queer Eco-Liberationist Solidarity and the Spirit of
Chalchiuhtlicue in Water Justice
Maricela DeMirjyn

8. Linking Ancestral Seeds and Waters to the Indigenous Places We Inhabit
Melissa K. Nelson and Nícola Wagenberg

Part 3: Kinship
Dekaaz Three
Rachel Bagby

9. Navajo (Diné) Youth: Cultivating Healthy Relationships Through Traditional
Reciprocity
Molly Bigknife Antonio

10. Xicana Mothering with Indigenous Food Systems: Reconnecting with
Mesoamerican Ancestral Knowledges through Frameworks of Intergenerational
Food Justice as a form of Activism
Sara Salazar

11. Kinsanity: Maddening Entanglements of Fugitive Indigenous Animisms &
Ecological Attachments Towards Ontological Unraveling
Pnar Sinopoulos-Lloyd

12. Our Differentiated Unity: An Evolutionary Perspective on Healing the
Wounds of Slavery and the Planet
Belvie Rooks

Part 4: Being And Becoming
Dekaaz Four
Rachel Bagby

13. The Good Earth: Finding Faith in Our Bodies and in the Land
Tayla Ealom

14. The Doctor Speculates an Alter Whoniverse
Ju-Pong Lin

15. Beauty out of the Shadows: The Indigenous Turn in a Filipina Narrative
Leny Mendoza Strobel

Index
Jeanine M. Canty, PhD, Professor at California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), intersects issues of social and ecological justice within the transformative learning process. She is both the editor and a contributor to Globalism and Localization: Emergent Approaches to Ecological and Social Crises and the author of Returning the Self to Nature: Undoing Our Collective Narcissism and Healing Our Planet.