This book develops the concept of feminist technoecologies as a theoretical and methodological tool for examining the co-constituive relation between technoloy and ecology , which have typically been vonsidered as distinct objects of studies. In underscoring how their dynamic relationality troubles the location of agency, this book challenges the idea that technology, as the marker of the innovative capacity of the human, either corrupts or saves ecology.
The contributions offer critical and creative tools for imagining alternative modalities of practicing care and thinking environmental sustainability.