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[Commlist] Call for Papers – Women and the Environment: Ecofeminism in Contemporary Literature (Investigaciones Feministas)
Wed Oct 15 16:10:44 GMT 2025
On behalf of the editorial team of /Investigaciones Feministas/ (Vol.
16, No. 2, 2025), we would like to kindly request the publication of our
Call for Papers on your platform.
The monograph is entitled /*Women and the Environment: Present-Day
Ecofeminism and its Reflection in Contemporary Literary Works*/, and
addresses the intersections between gender, technology, and ecology in
current literature. The full text of the call, including thematic areas
and submission guidelines, can be found in the following link:
https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/INFE/about/submissions
<https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/INFE/about/submissions>
Submission deadline: 3 November 2025
Publication date: December 2025
*The journal is open access and completely free of charge for both
authors and readers, with no article processing charges (APCs) applied.*
-----------------------
Call for Papers: /Investigaciones Feministas/ 2025. Vol. 16. Number 2.
Women and the Environment; Present Day Ecofeminism and its Reflection in
Contemporary Literary Works
The current climate crisis represents not only an environmental
emergency but also a profound crisis of social and gender justice,
hindering the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.
According to the report /"Feminist Climate Justice: A Framework for
Action"/ by UN Women, global climate change could lead to a scenario in
which, by 2050, 158 million more women and girls will live in poverty,
with an additional 236 million facing food insecurity (/Gender Snapshot
2023/).
In this context, ecofeminism emerges as a crucial framework for
understanding the intersections of patriarchal oppression, predatory
capitalism, and ecological devastation (Mies & Shiva, 2014). Through the
voices of Indigenous women, ecofeminist discourse challenges Western
anthropocentrism and proposes sustainability models rooted in mutual
respect between nature and humanity. These contributions offer
alternative epistemologies grounded in ancestral knowledge and
intergenerational transmission of insights on biodiversity, food
sovereignty, and ecological resilience (Lugones, 2010; Thorp & Paredes,
2010; Goeman, 2013; Whyte, 2014).
Contemporary literature serves as a platform to rethink the
relationships between gender, the environment, and technology within
society. Writers across geographies have created narratives interweaving
feminist and ecological struggles, crafting critical, utopian, and
resistant storytelling (Gaard, 2010). These texts underscore the urgency
of addressing the climate crisis through an intersectional lens,
considering the multifaceted ways in which gender, race, class, and
other identities intersect with environmental degradation (Kaijser &
Kronsell, 2013).
Ecofeminist literature is enriched by the knowledge and worldviews of
Indigenous women and communities in the Global South, historically
recognized as guardians of ancestral ecological knowledge and defenders
of their territories (Shiva, 2016). Works from authors like Ntozake
Shange, Toni Morrison, and Alice Walker document narratives of
resistance and connections between the body, nature, and culture,
revealing the ecofeminist dimensions of urban environments,
sustainability, and green gentrification (Rall et al., 2019).
Ecofeminist narratives also critically examine the role of technology in
perpetuating or subverting inequalities. The advent of generative
artificial intelligence, with its high energy consumption and tendency
to reproduce stereotypes and gender bias (Smith & Rustagi, 2021; Locke &
Hodgdon, 2024), illustrates the intrinsic link between the exploitation
of nature and the oppression of women. These technologies can exacerbate
the climate crisis and gender inequalities by excluding women from
equitable development and access (Perez, 2019). This aligns with
ecofeminist critiques that identify patriarchal and capitalist systems
as inherently tied to both environmental destruction and gender-based
oppression (Mies & Shiva, 2014).
At the same time, generative AI holds promise for personalized education
and the empowerment of women and girls by offering tools for equitable
participation in technology (UNESCO, 2020). It also expands the creative
and imaginative possibilities for writers and artists, enabling the
production of subversive and emancipatory narratives (Dobrin & Morey, 2019).
Parallelly, literary narratives address themes of the female body and
climate change implications, such as natural disasters, access to water,
and reproductive health. These narratives emphasize the disproportionate
ecological injustices affecting women (Di Chiro, 2010; Glazebrook et
al., 2020). Utopian and dystopian literature further contributes to this
discourse by envisioning post-patriarchal worlds and sustainable
development models that challenge dominant paradigms (Gearhart, 1979; Le
Guin, 1985).
The intersection of ecofeminism and digital culture finds expression
through multimedia narratives. Works combining visual arts, cinema, and
video games provide new tools to raise awareness of the climate
emergency and foster an inclusive, intersectional ecofeminist activism
(Nakamura, 2008).
This call for papers invites scholars to explore these intersections
from an interdisciplinary perspective, bridging gender studies, critical
ecology, and comparative literature. The aim is to analyze how
contemporary literature reflects, interrogates, and reimagines the
relationships between gender, technology, and the environment, opening
spaces for critique, resistance, and social transformation.
*Key Themes*
The thematic lines are as follows but are not limited to:
Las contribuciones girarán en torno a las siguientes líneas temáticas,
pero se pueden proponer otras similares:
●*Intersectional Ecofeminism and Voices from the Global South:*Analysis
of how ecofeminism articulates the connections between gender, class,
racialisation, and ecology, with particular emphasis on the experiences
and knowledge of women and communities from the Global South and their
protagonism in environmental and climate movements.
●*Indigenous Ecofeminism and Decolonial Narratives:*Studies on the
leadership of Indigenous women in the defence of territories, ancestral
knowledge, and reflections on decoloniality, spiritualities, and
resistance in the face of extractivism and colonialism.
●*Bodies and Ecology: Gender, Health, and Sustainability:*Research into
the intersections between feminised bodies, health, reproduction, access
to natural resources (water, food, energy), and environmental justice
issues, including aspects of biopolitics and vulnerabilities arising
from climate change.
●*Technology, Ecology, and Gender: Feminist Utopias and
Dystopias:*Approaches to the representation of links between gender,
nature, and technology in contemporary literature and science fiction,
examining possible futures and responses to ecological crises from
feminist and ecofeminist perspectives.
●*Emerging Technologies, Bioethics, and Digital Ecofeminism:*Studies on
the impacts of artificial intelligence, Big Data, and digitalisation in
the construction of ecological and gender inequalities, as well as the
emancipatory potential of technology for women and gender non-conforming
people, data ethics, and ecofeminist cyber-activism.
●*Ecofeminist Multimedia Narrative:*Analysis of works combining
literature, visual arts, film, video games, and digital culture to raise
awareness of the climate emergency and promote networks of
intersectional ecofeminist activism.
●*Ecoactivism and Literature: Stories of Resistance and
Transformation:*Examination of autobiographies, poetry, narrative and
other literary genres that document the struggles, successes, and
challenges of ecofeminism, as well as women’s capacity to re-signify the
environment and promote social change.
●*Ecofeminism in Urban Contexts: Gender and Sustainability in the
City:*Studies on the challenges and forms of resistance of women in
urban spaces, addressing topics such as green gentrification, mobility,
public policies, and activism for environmental justice in cities.
●*Spiritual Cosmologies and Ecofeminism: Spiritual Practices and
Indigenous Environmental Knowledge:*Reflection on spirituality and the
role of women in the transmission of ecological values and practices,
highlighting Indigenous and African-descendant cosmologies and
alternative eco-spiritual practices.
●*Public Policy and Feminist Climate Justice:*Critical analysis of
international, national, and local policies concerning climate change,
environmental justice, and gender (including the Feminist Climate
Justice framework of UN Women), and the role of women in environmental
and climate governance.
●*Utopian and Dystopian Fictions: Post-Patriarchal Imaginings and
Sustainability:*Research into speculative literature, utopias, and
dystopias that imagine more sustainable, equitable, and
de-patriarchalised societies.
●*Other Topics Related to Ecofeminism in Contemporary
Literature:*Proposals are also welcome which align with the general
theme, exploring new epistemologies and modes of relating women, nature,
technology, and society in contemporary literature and the arts.
*Issue coordinated by: *Dra. Giovanna Di Rosario (Politecnico di Milano,
Italia) y Dra. Maya Zalbidea Paniagua (Universidad Complutense de
Madrid, España).
*Call for papers*
All texts must be original and submitted through the platform
(submissions by email will not be accepted), strictly following the
journal’s guidelines
(https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/INFE/about/submissions
<https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/INFE/about/submissions>) and the
article template (Annex I:
https://revistas.ucm.es/Documentos/INF/Plantilla-articulos.docx
<https://revistas.ucm.es/Documentos/INF/Plantilla-articulos.docx>).
Papers may be submitted in English or Spanish. They cannot have been
previously published, nor can they be in the process of evaluation in
other journals.
It is preferable that they are the result of funded competitive
research, with a team of clear international vision and work. This
journal does not accept essays, chronicles, sketches or similar.
All articles will be subject to double-blind review.
Please note that apart from the Monograph texts, the Miscellaneous
section is always open, all year round, with articles in all issues of
the journal.
*Dates and deadlines*
Submission of original articles: until 3 November 2025.
Review of original articles: according to receipt and before 15 November
2025.
Publication: December 2025.
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