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Article

The Feminization of the Land and the Naturalization of the Black Female Body: Ecowomanism and African Ecocriticism in the Poetry of María Elcina Valencia Córdoba, Mary Grueso Romero, and Sonia Nadezhda Truque

by
Alexa Melissa Hurtado-Montaño
Department of Global Languages and Cultures, College of Art & Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4249, USA
Humanities 2026, 15(6), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15060071
Submission received: 22 February 2026 / Revised: 3 May 2026 / Accepted: 15 May 2026 / Published: 22 May 2026

Abstract

This article analyzes how twentieth- and twenty-first-century Afro-Colombian women poets from the Pacific region challenge and reframe the feminization of the land and the naturalization of the Black female body within colonial and Eurocentric epistemologies. Drawing on a framework that conceptualizes body, territory, spirituality, and community as an interdependent continuum, the article conducts close textual analysis to demonstrate how these poets construct territory and the Black female body as sentient sites. These sites are simultaneously shaped by historical violence, forced displacement, extractive economies, and racialized gender constructs, while preserving ancestral knowledge and collective memory. The findings show that Valencia Córdoba develops the body–territory through metaphor and anaphora as a generative space; Grueso Romero deploys orality and the sea as transatlantic archives of ancestry and identity; and Truque articulates urban displacement as an ontological rupture that affects memory and Black subjectivity. Ultimately, the article advances the concept of body–territory as a decolonial aesthetic and analytical tool through which Afro-Colombian women’s poetry articulates environmental justice, gendered racialization, and forms of resistance within the Afrodiasporic diaspora.
Keywords: decolonial aesthetics; Afro-Colombian poetry; Afrodiasporic epistemologies; African ecocriticism; ecowomanism; body–territory; relational ontology; gender decolonial aesthetics; Afro-Colombian poetry; Afrodiasporic epistemologies; African ecocriticism; ecowomanism; body–territory; relational ontology; gender

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MDPI and ACS Style

Hurtado-Montaño, A.M. The Feminization of the Land and the Naturalization of the Black Female Body: Ecowomanism and African Ecocriticism in the Poetry of María Elcina Valencia Córdoba, Mary Grueso Romero, and Sonia Nadezhda Truque. Humanities 2026, 15, 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/h15060071

AMA Style

Hurtado-Montaño AM. The Feminization of the Land and the Naturalization of the Black Female Body: Ecowomanism and African Ecocriticism in the Poetry of María Elcina Valencia Córdoba, Mary Grueso Romero, and Sonia Nadezhda Truque. Humanities. 2026; 15(6):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/h15060071

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hurtado-Montaño, Alexa Melissa. 2026. "The Feminization of the Land and the Naturalization of the Black Female Body: Ecowomanism and African Ecocriticism in the Poetry of María Elcina Valencia Córdoba, Mary Grueso Romero, and Sonia Nadezhda Truque" Humanities 15, no. 6: 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/h15060071

APA Style

Hurtado-Montaño, A. M. (2026). The Feminization of the Land and the Naturalization of the Black Female Body: Ecowomanism and African Ecocriticism in the Poetry of María Elcina Valencia Córdoba, Mary Grueso Romero, and Sonia Nadezhda Truque. Humanities, 15(6), 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/h15060071

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