Tales From Camp Wilde: Queer(y)ing Environmental Education Research

Authors

  • Noel Gough Deakin University, Australia
  • Annette Gough Deakin University, Australia
  • Peter Appelbaum Arcadia University,
  • Sophia Appelbaum Project Learn School,Philadelphia
  • Mary Aswell Doll Savannah College of Art and Design, Georgia, USA,
  • Warren Sellers Deakin University, Australia

Abstract

This paper questions the relative silence of queer theory and theorizing in environmental education research. We explore some possibilities for queering environmental education research by fabricating (and inviting colleagues to fabricate) stories of Camp Wilde, a fictional location that helps us to expose the facticity of the field's heteronormative constructedness. These stories suggest alternative ways of (re)presenting and (re)producing both the subjects/objects of our inquiries and our identities as researchers. The contributors draw on a variety of theoretical resources from art history, deconstruction, ecofeminism, literary criticism, popular cultural studies, and feminist poststructuralism to perform an orientation to environmental education research that we hope will never be arrested by its categorization as a "new genre."

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Published

2003-01-01

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Section

Articles