One of KW’s successful annual offerings is the Inhabit online course, focusing on ecofeminist and indigenous women’s engagements with bodies, lands and memories. In 2024, the Inhabit course had 41 applicants. In 2025, 140 people applied.
Through weekly readings, discussions, and personal writings and reflections, participants encounter important literature and concepts from different communities. And we take the time to interact with these works more deeply. From learning about the history of the term ecofeminism, to exploring how indigenous perspectives challenge dominant systems with differing views on kinship, on temporality, power, and spirituality, to thinking about indigenous technologies– the course spans a wide range of topics. Importantly too, the Inhabit course brings in materials and frames of reference from the region. In the evaluation at the end of the course, one participant said that what they enjoyed about the course was that it succeeded in “stimulating engaging conversations, pushing us to reflect on our previously held views.” Another stated that “The Inhabit course deepened my understanding of ecofeminism and indigenous knowledge systems.”
