Matthew Gandy on queer ecology
29 October 2012
Urban Lab Steering Committee member Matthew Gandy explores
the interdisciplinary terrain of ‘queer ecology’ in Society and Space (Volume 30 Issue 4),
using the example of an urban cemetery in North London as an empirical and
conceptual starting point. Though the term ‘queer ecology’ has cropped up a few
times it has yet to be addressed directly in order to consider how the
seemingly disparate fields of queer theory and urban ecology might benefit from
closer interaction. It will be suggested that the theoretical synthesis
represented by queer ecology serves to expand the conceptual and material scope
of both fields: queer theory is revealed to have only a partially developed
engagement with urban nature whilst critical strands of urban ecology such as
urban political ecology have yet to connect in a systematic way with queer
theory, posthumanism, or new conceptions of complexity emerging from within the
science of ecology itself. It is concluded that queer ecology may enrich our
understanding of both urban materiality and the role of metaphors in urban
theory. In particular, the idea of queer ecology illuminates the possibility
for site-specific ‘heterotopic alliances’ in the contemporary city.
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