Dear Earthlings:
The EcoSex course at U Conn is in process. It's a great experience. We are reading amazing books. Thinking out of the box and across disciplines. Students are sending their responses in, with discussion questions. In class, we connect the dots: a holograph of what we've read together, the "required readings." Multiple perspectives and good synergy. Here, we offer a glimpse. Stefanie Iris Weiss's EcoSex: Go Green Between the Sheets, was one of two introductory books. We got five responses: from John, Alex, Adam, Rhiann, Alissa, and Michael.
Here's John's take:
Response to Stefanie
Iris Weiss's EcoSex: Go Green Between the Sheets
Weiss wrote a very
intriguing book that sent me to my cabinet on numerous occasions. I found that
all the items I use in my shower – my shampoo, conditioner, soap, and even my
shaving cream – all contained various toxins she listed. I was too afraid to
reach into the fridge and check those out as well. But I did start drinking my
coffee black.
That said, Weiss
makes me hate my life. Reading her book thoroughly makes you want to inspect
every aspect of your existence, from not only reducing your general carbon foot
print, but checking the brand of your shower curtain. At some point it just
gets to be too much, though the general philosophy and spirit of the book is
something I can get behind, I don’t have time for my class schedule never mind
going through my house and checking every material good to make sure it has
been eco certified. While I will certainly make a conscious effort to try and
get the more intimate things of my life (shaving cream, for example) from a
more eco-friendly source, the sad truth is that I, like most of society, simple
can’t afford a perfectly ecological lifestyle. I worked (and am still involved
with) a permaculture farm in Old Saybrook. The farmer is one of the most
ecological and least consumptive people I know. His diet consists mostly of
what he grows, and feeds his chickens with restaurant scrapings. He lights his
house with candles, but I’m pretty sure they aren’t from Rawganique. That
doesn’t make him unecological (not that Weiss is making that argument). The
Weiss book is a handy companion to find alternatives to our consumptive
lifestyle, but I couldn’t slug through every single word of her recipes and
alternative finds (I don’t use dildos, and I’m very comfortable with my
mattress and pillows, thank you very much).
The recipes (the
food sounds delicious) weren’t all that bad. What bothered me were all the
statistics that precluded the recipes. Weiss wrote a 203 page book and included
40 citations. For a work that cited as many alarmist statistics as she does,
that’s not nearly enough citations. For a published work making pretty
declarative claims, that’s a big deal. Especially since we, as students, would
get an F for making as many unsourced claims as she does. I can’t account for
the veracity – or falsity for that matter – of most of her claims, but for
example, my Dad replaced all the pipes of our house once with copper piping. It
was a big deal because most developers are using some new plastic “flexi-pipe”
because it’s cheaper than copper. The reason flexi-pipe is cheaper than copper
is because we’re very quickly approaching peak copper in society. But on page
135, Weiss calls copper “an inexpensive and readily available metal.” My red
flags waved and a quick Internet search for “peak copper” yields thousands of
results and sources for the rising price of an increasingly rare metal. While
I’m on board with the environmental movement, Weiss seems to make the argument
that everything in our homes will give us cancer and murder us while we are
sleeping.
I enjoy her bit on
Tantric Sex and intimacy. As someone who’s practiced those things, it’s
definitely an awesome inclusion and a nice sigh of relief in a book that’s
filled with mostly lists of alternatives to our deadly cosmetics.
To contrast the
Tantra, I wasn’t on board with her Abortion section on pages 139-40. I consider
myself a quiet Pro-Life advocate. I’m a man, so I won’t ever have to make that
decision personally, therefore I try to keep my opinions to myself and just try
to help in any way I can. I think the truck that Conservative organization
drives around campus is insane and should be criminal. I think our society
needs to not stigmatize bastard births, unmarried parents, and most
importantly, needs to get on the adoption train. Reading a lot of “Green
Literature” already makes me feel like an outcast: the overwhelming use of the
pronouns “her” and “she” automatically directs environmentalist literature
toward women, labeling her section on abortion “Your Choice” and automatically
saying “Yea abortion, not a big deal” makes me feel even more so. I don’t know
any Pro-Choice advocates who say abortion isn’t a big deal, or something to do
on a whim. Instead of coming off with a sympathetic eye to readers who might
not be on board the abortion train, Weiss assumes her reader is female and
doesn’t mind having an abortion. As a man who already feels outcast in this
genre of literature, she doesn’t have to rub it in.
Overall, I found
the book’s philosophy fascinating and a lot of the methods and suggestions
innovative. But I felt self-conscious the entire time knowing I was not her
target audience, and now understand why so many of my peers are resistant to
this subculture. Not only that, but her lack of citations calls her credibility
into question and doesn’t inspire confidence.
Questions for
Discussion
1. Is
abortion an environmentalist issue?
2. Why
does (or doesn’t) an environmentalist have to be Pro-Choice?
3. How
can we introduce Vancouver’s 100-Year Sustainability Plan to local communities?
John D. Nitowski
Published with permission
WGSS 3998 - Ecosexuality and the Ecology of Love
Prof. Serena Anderlini-D'Onofrio
U Conn, Storrs, Spring 2013
Dear Earthlings:
Let "nature" be your teacher in the arts of love. Education is the heart of democracy, education to love. Come back for more wonders: Students Responses to appear every Tuesday. Book Reports to be scheduled soon. Check out our summer offerings: Ecosexuality in Portland, OR, July 17-21. Info and Registration here!
Namaste,
Serena Anderlini-D'Onofrio, PhD
Gilf Gaia Extraordinaire
University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez
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