Discovering Françoise d’Eaubonne, Pioneering Ecofeminist

At the age of eleven, Françoise d’Eaubonne (March 12, 1920 – August 3, 2005) wrote on a convent wall, “Vive le féminisme!”


This was just the start of what would be a radical life as a member of the French Communist Party, writing more than fifty novels and essays and, most importantly, coining her defining theory: ecofeminism.


One of the best-known leaders of the French feminist movement, d’Eaubonne’s most famous work was her essay “Le Féminisme ou Le Mort” (Feminism or Death), published in 1974.


Up until last year, I had never heard the name Françoise d’Eaubonne. Perusing the various muddled titles in a French second-hand book market I happened upon a book with a rather interesting cover, and still more interesting blurb:


“Pour la première fois peut-être dans l’histoire de la science-fiction, le héros: le pilote de l’astronef, est une femme!”


Using my rather amateurish French, I translate: “for perhaps the first time in the history of science fiction, the hero, the pilot of the spacecraft is a woman!” I was intrigued. Why have I never heard of this? If I am to believe the blurb, isn’t this revolutionary?


. . . . . . . . . . 


Les sept fils de l'etoile by Francoise d'Eaubonne. . . . . . . . . . 


Les Sept Fils de l’Etoile

Three euros poorer, clutching Les Sept Fils de l’Étoile, written in 1962 by the mysterious Françoise d’Eaubonne, I was on the quest to discover this forgotten heroine. A barely existent Wikipedia page, most of her books to be found on no site, let alone an English-language one, I felt in possession of a secret treasure: I had to turn to discovering her through the book itself.


Reading the first few pages, it is not hard to see that d’Eaubonne was ahead of her time, her work seething with feminist and colonialist criticism (phrases such as “it’s rare for a woman to get to my job level” and “a result of earthly racism”), but in a foreign landscape: space. D’Eaubonne seemed to be especially concerned with the environment.


 


Ecofeminism as seminal theory

From there I could finally find information on this enigma. Later branded “apolitical and ahistorical,” ecofeminism was d’Eaubonne’s seminal theory. She asserted that the patriarchy views both women and nature as wild and unruly, and that in a utopian world, there would be equality under the harmony of nature, with all organic functions respected.


A contemporary and friend of Simone de Beauvoir, d’Eaubonne wrote to her in a letter: “nous sommes toutes vengées.” This means “we are all avenged.” She is right; it is therefore time for d’Eaubonne to have a resurgence.


Contributed by Beatrice Ricketts.


. . . . . . . . . .


Francoise d'Eaubonne et l’Ecoféminisme by Caroline Goldblum


Françoise d’Eaubonne page on Amazon

. . . . . . . . . . .


More about Françoise d’Eaubonne and ecofeminism

Britannica’s article on ecofeminism
Françoise d’Eaubonne, pionnière de l’écoféminisme

Françoise d’Eaubonne et l’Ecoféminisme by Caroline Goldblum




Selected  works – Fiction



Le cœur de Watteau, 1944
Comme un vol de gerfauts, prix des lecteurs 1947
Belle Humeur ou la Véridique Histoire de Mandrin,1957
J’irai cracher sur vos tombes, 1959
Les Tricheurs,
Jusqu’à la gauche, 1963
Les Bergères de l’Apocalypse, 1978
On vous appelait terroristes, 1979
Je ne suis pas née pour mourir, 1982
Terrorist’s blues, 1987
Floralies du désert, 1995

Selected essays



“Le complexe de Diane, érotisme ou féminisme”  1951
Y a-t-il encore des hommes?  1964
Eros minoritaire, 1970
Le féminisme ou la mort, 1974
Les femmes avant le patriarcat, 1976
Contre violence ou résistance à l’état, 1978
Écologie, féminisme : révolution ou mutation ?, 1978
La liseuse et la lyre, 1997

. . . . . . . . . . .


*This is an Amazon Affiliate link. If the product is purchased by linking through, Literary Ladies Guide receives a modest commission, which helps maintain our site and helps it to continue growing!


The post Discovering Françoise d’Eaubonne, Pioneering Ecofeminist appeared first on Literary Ladies Guide.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 20, 2020 06:45
No comments have been added yet.