'I am cringe, but I am free': A Reparative Reading of Assuming the Ecosexual Position

IF 0.5 0 PHILOSOPHY
{"title":"'I am cringe, but I am free': A Reparative Reading of Assuming the Ecosexual Position","authors":"","doi":"10.2979/een.2023.a899193","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"'I am cringe, but I am free':A Reparative Reading of Assuming the Ecosexual Position Vanesa Raditz (bio) and Jess Martinez (bio) Annie Sprinkle, Beth Stephens, Jennie Klein, and Linda Montano. Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth as Lover. University of Minnesota Press, 2021. ISBN 9781452965796. INTRODUCTION Ecosexual: Eco from the ancient Greek oikos; sexual from Latin, sexuales 1. a person who finds nature romantic, sensual, erotic, or sexy, which can include humans or not. 2. A new sexual identity (self-identified). 3. A person who takes the Earth as their lover. 4. A term used in dating advertisements. 5. An environmental activist strategy. 6. A grassroots movement. 7. A person who has a more expanded concept of what sex and orgasm are beyond mainstream definitions. 8. A person who imagines sex as an ecology that extends beyond the physical body. Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth As Lover (Sprinkle and Stephens 2021, 2) What does it mean to take the Earth as a lover? How does it change our experiences of pleasure in our bodies to give attention to the eroticism of air in our lungs, mud on our skin, or water in our throats? How would it shape our ethical commitments to these elements that we depend upon for life if we were to reconnect with them as pleasurable extensions of our own bodies? These questions are at the heart of the decades-long research-creation performance-art collaboration between Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens that has built an international \"ecosexual\" identity and movement, a tale that they document in their new book, Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth as Lover. Part travelog, part relationship memoir, part how-to guide, Assuming the Ecosexual Position chronicles [End Page 105] the emergence and evolution of their ecosex concept and community through a playful recounting of over a decade of productions: performative weddings to the earth, moon, lakes, rocks and beyond; theatrical two-women sexecology performances that culminate in explicit sex in piles of earth; ecosex walking tours; workshops; public sex clinics; documentary films; and so much more. Woven throughout are philosophical reflections on the entanglements between bodies, land, sex, eroticism, and love, many of which emerge from ecofeminist thought, pollinated with the post-porn, sex-positive, queer feminism of the 80s and 90s. In introducing their philosophical inspirations, they name Greta Gaard's classic piece on queering ecofeminism (18) which stimulated a body of work describing the ways that patriarchal systems of power simultaneously oppress women, the erotic, and nature (1997). Drawing upon Sprinkle's background in porn and post-porn modernist theater, Stephens' background as a queer artist with a doctorate in Performance Studies, their mutual interest in sex education, and their love for the redwoods of Santa Cruz, the pair crafted ecosexuality as a particular lens for expanding queer ecofeminist inquiry into the power of sexual liberation for ecological liberation, which they do through the creative methodologies of performance. The performance art practice that they develop has significant inspiration from the Fluxus art movement, which resisted the authority of museums to define the meaning or value of art, and encouraged the active practice and production of art throughout life. Among the inspirations they list in the introduction to Assuming the Ecosexual Position, Donna Haraway and Kim TallBear stand out. Donna Haraway's presence is felt throughout the book—as a colleague of Stephens at UC Santa Cruz, as a friend at their Wedding to the Earth, as a collaborator in the documentary Water Makes Us Wet, and ultimately, as a posthuman philosopher (Haraway 2000) who has inspired Stephens and Sprinkle to \"see ecosex as a conceptual art practice and a way of thinking beyond individual identity, and even beyond human beings, to envision a larger system—an ecology of relationships\" (8). The authors also express the influence of their evolving relationship with Kim TallBear, with whom Beth studied while pursuing her PhD, and who has encouraged the pair to leverage this posthuman and new materialist consciousness towards decolonial politics (TallBear 2015). 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

'I am cringe, but I am free':A Reparative Reading of Assuming the Ecosexual Position Vanesa Raditz (bio) and Jess Martinez (bio) Annie Sprinkle, Beth Stephens, Jennie Klein, and Linda Montano. Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth as Lover. University of Minnesota Press, 2021. ISBN 9781452965796. INTRODUCTION Ecosexual: Eco from the ancient Greek oikos; sexual from Latin, sexuales 1. a person who finds nature romantic, sensual, erotic, or sexy, which can include humans or not. 2. A new sexual identity (self-identified). 3. A person who takes the Earth as their lover. 4. A term used in dating advertisements. 5. An environmental activist strategy. 6. A grassroots movement. 7. A person who has a more expanded concept of what sex and orgasm are beyond mainstream definitions. 8. A person who imagines sex as an ecology that extends beyond the physical body. Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth As Lover (Sprinkle and Stephens 2021, 2) What does it mean to take the Earth as a lover? How does it change our experiences of pleasure in our bodies to give attention to the eroticism of air in our lungs, mud on our skin, or water in our throats? How would it shape our ethical commitments to these elements that we depend upon for life if we were to reconnect with them as pleasurable extensions of our own bodies? These questions are at the heart of the decades-long research-creation performance-art collaboration between Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens that has built an international "ecosexual" identity and movement, a tale that they document in their new book, Assuming the Ecosexual Position: The Earth as Lover. Part travelog, part relationship memoir, part how-to guide, Assuming the Ecosexual Position chronicles [End Page 105] the emergence and evolution of their ecosex concept and community through a playful recounting of over a decade of productions: performative weddings to the earth, moon, lakes, rocks and beyond; theatrical two-women sexecology performances that culminate in explicit sex in piles of earth; ecosex walking tours; workshops; public sex clinics; documentary films; and so much more. Woven throughout are philosophical reflections on the entanglements between bodies, land, sex, eroticism, and love, many of which emerge from ecofeminist thought, pollinated with the post-porn, sex-positive, queer feminism of the 80s and 90s. In introducing their philosophical inspirations, they name Greta Gaard's classic piece on queering ecofeminism (18) which stimulated a body of work describing the ways that patriarchal systems of power simultaneously oppress women, the erotic, and nature (1997). Drawing upon Sprinkle's background in porn and post-porn modernist theater, Stephens' background as a queer artist with a doctorate in Performance Studies, their mutual interest in sex education, and their love for the redwoods of Santa Cruz, the pair crafted ecosexuality as a particular lens for expanding queer ecofeminist inquiry into the power of sexual liberation for ecological liberation, which they do through the creative methodologies of performance. The performance art practice that they develop has significant inspiration from the Fluxus art movement, which resisted the authority of museums to define the meaning or value of art, and encouraged the active practice and production of art throughout life. Among the inspirations they list in the introduction to Assuming the Ecosexual Position, Donna Haraway and Kim TallBear stand out. Donna Haraway's presence is felt throughout the book—as a colleague of Stephens at UC Santa Cruz, as a friend at their Wedding to the Earth, as a collaborator in the documentary Water Makes Us Wet, and ultimately, as a posthuman philosopher (Haraway 2000) who has inspired Stephens and Sprinkle to "see ecosex as a conceptual art practice and a way of thinking beyond individual identity, and even beyond human beings, to envision a larger system—an ecology of relationships" (8). The authors also express the influence of their evolving relationship with Kim TallBear, with whom Beth studied while pursuing her PhD, and who has encouraged the pair to leverage this posthuman and new materialist consciousness towards decolonial politics (TallBear 2015). They cite one of TallBear's blog posts on ecosexuality, where she encourages ecosexuals to use a critical eye towards "New Age" appropriation of Native American ceremonies...
“我在畏缩,但我是自由的”:对假定生态性立场的修复性解读
“我是畏缩,但我是自由的”:对假设生态性立场的修复性解读瓦内萨·拉迪兹(传记)和杰斯·马丁内斯(传记)安妮·斯普林、贝丝·斯蒂芬斯、珍妮·克莱因和琳达·蒙塔诺。假设生态性的立场:地球是爱人。明尼苏达大学出版社,2021年。ISBN 9781452965796。生态性:Eco源自古希腊语oikos;源自拉丁语sexales认为自然浪漫、感性、色情或性感的人,这可以包括人类,也可以不包括人类。2. 一种新的性别认同(自我认同)。3.一个以地球为爱人的人。4. 约会广告中使用的术语。5. 一种环保主义者的策略。6. 草根运动。7. 一个对性和性高潮有更广泛概念的人,超越了主流定义。8. 把性想象成一种超越肉体的生态的人。假设生态性别的立场:地球作为爱人(Sprinkle和Stephens 2021, 2)把地球作为爱人意味着什么?它是如何改变我们对身体快感的体验,把注意力放在肺里的空气、皮肤上的泥土或喉咙里的水上的?如果我们将这些我们赖以生存的元素重新连接为我们自己身体的愉悦延伸,它将如何塑造我们对这些元素的道德承诺?这些问题是安妮·斯普兰克和贝丝·斯蒂芬斯长达数十年的研究创作行为艺术合作的核心,他们建立了一个国际性的“生态性”身份和运动,他们在新书《假设生态性的立场:作为爱人的地球》中记录了这个故事。部分旅行日志,部分关系回忆录,部分操作指南,假设生态性别的立场编年史[结束页105]的出现和演变,他们的生态性别概念和社区通过一个有趣的叙述超过十年的作品:表演婚礼到地球,月亮,湖泊,岩石和超越;戏剧性的两个女人的性生态学表演,以明确的性行为在土堆中达到高潮;生态徒步游;车间;公共性诊所;纪录片;还有更多。贯穿全书的是对身体、土地、性、情色和爱情之间纠缠的哲学思考,其中许多都来自生态女权主义思想,并受到80年代和90年代后色情、性积极、酷儿女权主义的影响。在介绍他们的哲学灵感时,他们提到了格蕾塔·加德(Greta Gaard)关于酷儿生态女权主义的经典作品(18),该作品激发了一系列描述父权制权力同时压迫女性、情欲和自然的方式的作品(1997)。利用斯柏克在色情和后色情现代主义戏剧方面的背景,斯蒂芬斯作为一名拥有表演研究博士学位的酷儿艺术家的背景,他们对性教育的共同兴趣,以及他们对圣克鲁斯红杉的热爱,这对夫妇将生态性行为作为一种特殊的视角,扩展了酷儿生态女权主义者对性解放对生态解放的力量的探索,他们通过表演的创造性方法来实现这一点。他们发展的行为艺术实践从激浪派艺术运动中获得了重要的灵感,激浪派艺术运动抵制博物馆对艺术意义或价值的权威定义,鼓励在生活中积极地实践和生产艺术。在他们在《假设生态性取向》的引言中列出的灵感中,唐娜·哈拉威和金·塔尔贝尔脱颖而出。唐娜·哈拉威的存在贯穿于整本书——作为斯蒂芬斯在加州大学圣克鲁兹分校的同事,作为他们与地球的婚礼上的朋友,作为纪录片《水使我们潮湿》的合作者,最终,作为一位后人类哲学家(哈拉威2000年),她激励斯蒂芬斯和斯普兰奇“将性行为视为一种观念艺术实践,一种超越个人身份,甚至超越人类的思维方式,”设想一个更大的系统——关系的生态”(8)。作者还表达了他们与Kim TallBear不断发展的关系的影响,Beth在攻读博士学位时与Kim TallBear一起学习,并鼓励两人利用这种后人类和新唯物主义意识来实现非殖民主义政治(TallBear 2015)。他们引用了TallBear的一篇关于同性恋的博客文章,她鼓励同性恋者用批判的眼光看待“新时代”对印第安人仪式的挪用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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