Ecofeminism vandana shiva maria mies biography

Maria mies ecofeminism The ecological feminists Maria Mies and Vandana Shiva have published a second edition of their widely known book after 20 years, once again fighting passive consumerism and social decay with a straightforward and radical analysis of patriarchal structures that reflects and re-envisions their model of subsistence. Very conscious of their partial view and their political goals and engagement as academics and feminists, they speak out about what it means to be loyal to future generations and the planet and to maintain life-sustaining practices of working and living in a way that defies capitalist patriarchy. Filled with numerous cases, the book includes discussions on the very beginning of life, such as the marketization of the human foetus, seeds and wombs in light of new technologies such as in-vitro fertilization and programmes of sterilization. It highlights the role of women to preserve indigenous knowledge, e. The chapters illuminate how white men colonize women, peasants and countries alike through, for instance, defining science as pure truth and expert knowledge as power, or transforming motherhood and the female body into an industrial production process.

Vandana Shiva on Maria Mies: Her stay in India helped her see that women’s work was economy&#;s foundation

Shiva spoke to The Indian Express about Mies and their work.

Please define ecofeminism for our readers

Ecofeminism is a worldview that recognises that humans are part of Nature, not separate.

In their interconnectedness through life, Nature and Women are Alive and Autonomous, not dead passive objects to be exploited and violated by masculine power.

Also in Explained | Global warming: Why India is heating up slower than the world average

The creativity and productivity of Nature and Women are the foundations of all knowledge systems and all economies, even though they are invisible to the eyes of Capitalist Patriarchy.

How did Maria Mies&#;s work contribute to the field?

Maria was an organic intellectual.

Her ideas grow from her experience. Her stay in India enriched her thinking to see that women’s work was the foundation of the economy.

Vandana shiva Vandana Shiva , Maria Mies. Zed Books Ltd. This groundbreaking work remains as relevant today as when it was when first published. Two of Zed's best-known authors argue that ecological destruction and industrial catastrophes constitute a direct threat to everyday life, the maintenance of which has been made the particular responsibility of women. In both industrialized societies and the developing countries, the new wars the world is experiencing, violent ethnic chauvinisms and the malfunctioning of the economy also pose urgent questions for ecofeminists.

Over the years, her work evolved as an Ecofeminist, both through her contributions to the movement FINRAGE (Feminist International Network of Resistance to Reproductive and Genetic Engineering), and her aricultulation of the subsistence economy as the economy where nature’s economy and women’s economy meet to provide sustainable suspense to all

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How does capitalism take away women&#;s control over farming?

Capitalist Patriarchy as a world view and a system of knowledge as well as organising the economy has been instituted over the last few centuries, through colonialism, fossil fuel industrialism, and the rule of violence, greed, and destruction of nature and cultures.

Capitalist Patriarchy assumes nature is dead matter, and women are passive. The unit of capitalist patriarchy is the corporation, with the first corporation created as the East India Company in

The British empire was an empire of cotton, extracting $ 45 trillion from India, leaving a trail of famines.

Corporations are a patriarchal construct, made in the image of a rich white man.

Corporations work for only one objective, profits.

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They introduced war chemicals as agrochemicals in agriculture.

Ecofeminism vandana shiva maria mies biography Maria Mies, a Marxist Feminist scholar and academic, passed away on May 16 at the age of For decades, Mies wrote extensively on how patriarchy, capitalism, and colonialism have exploited women as well as nature. The German activist had a long association with India, teaching at the Goethe-Institut in Pune from to and returning to the country several times. In , Mies co-wrote the important book Ecofeminism with Vandana Shiva, scientist and activist. Shiva spoke to The Indian Express about Mies and their work.

They shaped the rules of WTO, which include the Intellectual Property Rights and ownership of seeds written by Monsanto [an agrochemical company], free trade in agriculture written by Cargill, and the Sanitary and PhytoSanitary agreement written by the junk food industry — Pepsi, Coke, Nestle.

Women have been the Seed keepers and breeders, most farmers are women, all artisanal food processing was in women’s hands.

The Corporations entering agriculture have displaced women from the seed sector, from agricultural production, from food processing.

That is why I created Navdanya and the Mahila Anna swaraj movement, to keep Food Sovereignty in Women’s Hands

At the Food Summit, Maria Mies and I launched a global movement to keep food sovereignty in women’s hands.

How does climate change impact women disproportionately?

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Climate Change is a consequence of capitalist patriarchy, the arrogance of denying that nature is living, and that women have knowledge to work and produce without fossil fuels and chemicals driving climate change.

The first impact is the denial of women’s knowledge and economies. The second impact is the consequences of climate change in terms of increased intensity and frequency of cyclones, flooding, droughts. Women are the most vulnerable in times of climate disasters.

But as cocreators and ecological producers, women are also resilient. Women&#;s practices of resilience, such as conserving seeds of climate resilience, practising regenerative ecological organic agriculture, building local economies, show the path to mitigating climate impact, while building resilience to climate change.

Mies wrote Indian Women and Patriarchy in What is the one point from the book that you think is the most relevant today?

Maria showed us that capitalist patriarchy is an extractive economy that extracts the value women create and creates the illusion that capital is the creative force that creates wealth.

As told to Yashee