Blue Ecofeminism: Rethinking Our Oceans and Remembering the Goddess

Language, Culture, Environment 1:24-41 (2020)
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Abstract

Over the next ten years, the United Nations has invited the global community to think about, and make decisions concerning, the future of our oceans in a way that has not been afforded to other significant revolutions in our human development. Within the profoundly anthropocentric aims and methodologies of this ocean decade, it is negligent to not more explicitly consider our human narrative shared with our oceans as an essential component to understanding a more complete picture of coastal and ocean sustainability. Our human narrative shared with the ocean is essentially immersed within a particular world view which provides the very framework and context to this global endeavour. In the face of plundered and acidified oceans, we ought to be asking whether a continuation of this paradigm is in our best interest at all? I reflect on how the current state of our oceans is a direct reflection of our colonising relationship with the ocean as a mere resource. This paper comprises my mediations concerning the colonisation of our oceans even when our aims are toward a sustainable development. I have chosen to draw on a number of feminist philosophers to appropriately reflect the undeniably gendered cultural narrative we have shared with our Mother ocean. I go on to propose a blue ecofeminism as a possible emerging perspective within the established scholarship in feminist environmental philosophy to more wholistically contribute to the Decade of Ocean UN discourse.

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