Queer Ecologies of Overflow: Bodies-Territory in Dispute in the Face of Extractivism

 

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor: Rincón Soto, Idana Beroska
Formato: artículo original
Estado:Versión publicada
Data de Publicación:2026
Descripción:This essay proposes a critical reading of modern nature from queer ecologies located in Latin America. Instead of understanding queer as a fixed identity, it is approached as an onto-epistemic power capable of overflowing the colonial regimes that separate nature/culture, body/territory and knowledge/desire. It is argued that extractivism operates as a rationality of material, epistemic, and ontological dispossession that reconfigures territories and corporalities through economies that produce available, useful, or disposable lives. In contrast to this, the notion of pedagogies of overflow is developed: critical practices that do not replace dispossession with its opposite, but reveal its ambivalences and surpluses, enabling modes of multispecies cohabitability, dissident care, and economies of bonding. By articulating Latin American queer thought, decolonial feminisms, indigenous cosmopolitics, and critical ecologies, the text argues that queer ecologies are not a supplement to environmental diversity, but a vital commitment to re-existences that disrupt the boundaries between body, desire, territory, and life.
País:Portal de Revistas UNA
Institución:Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Portal de Revistas UNA
Idioma:Español
OAI Identifier:oai:www.revistas.una.ac.cr:article/21177
Acceso en liña:https://www.revistas.una.ac.cr/index.php/revgefedi/article/view/21177
Palabra crave:ecologías cuires
pedagogías del desborde
extractivismo
crítica onto-epistémica
cuerpo-territorio
queer ecologies
pedagogies of overflow
extractivism
onto-epistemic criticism
body-territory
ecologias cuir
pedagogias do desbordo
extrativismo
crítica onto-epistêmica
corpo-território