The essay explicates feminist technoecologies is a theoretical and methodological tool for new materialisms. Exploring the constitutive relationality between technology and ecology, the concept draws on feminist and new materialist theorizations that challenge the denigrative production of otherness, such as nature, the nonhuman, and the body.
While central to novel conceptions of ecology is the recognition of the radical interdependence of the human and more-than-human, feminist technoecoolgies takes into account information technologies and technocapitalisation. Thus, the concept simultaneously attends to the dynamic systematicities and multispecies entanglements that unsettle the boundaries between self and other, organism and environment, within technocapitalized relations and attends to the specificities of boundary drawing practices that are always corporeal, political, and ethical.