Ecofeminist Critique of Environmental Collapse and Its Impact on Women’s Bodies in Children of Men (2006)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.57656/Keywords:
ecofeminism, dystopia, biopolitics, commodification, marginalizationAbstract
This paper examines Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men (2006) through an ecofeminist framework informed by Karen J. Warren’s philosophy. The study explores how the film portrays the intersection between environmental collapse and patriarchal control, revealing how women’s bodies become sites of exploitation and resistance. By analyzing the film’s depiction of infertility, biopolitics, and ecological decay, the paper argues that Children of Men exposes the deep interrelation between environmental degradation and gender-based oppression. Through a close reading of visual and narrative elements, the study highlights how ecofeminist theory can illuminate the ways in which environmental and gender injustices are mutually reinforcing.
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Published
2025-12-26
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