Migrant Ecologies investigates the ways in which Zheng Xiaoqiong's
poetry exposes the entanglements of migrant ecologies embedded within
local and global networks of capital and labor. The author contends that
women migrant workers in particular, as portrayed in Zheng's poems, are
the visible manifestation of the interconnections between the so-called
"factories of the world" and slum villages-in-the-city, between urban
development and rural decline, and between the local environmental
degradation and the global market. By adopting an ecological approach to
Zheng's poems about women migrant workers in China, the author explores
what Donna Haraway calls "webbed ecologies" (49). The concept of
"ecologies" serves to enhance not only the layered, complex
interconnections underlying women migrant workers' plight and
environmental degradation in China, but also the emergence and
transformation of migrant spaces, subjects, activism, and networks
resulting in part from globalization.