The Gaia hypothesis puts forward the idea that the Earth can be considered as a single dynamic system made up of multiple interrelated and interdependent sub-systems. This theory, which runs counter to classical human-nature dualism and lays the foundations for deep ecology, is fertile in that it heralds a necessary revolution in our relationship with the non-human. It is in the name of this idea that certain direct actions are sometimes justified: activists themselves are “nature defending itself”.
In the face of institutional inertia and political negligence, more and more citizens are taking up the fight. In Europe, environmental activism is becoming “radicalized” in that it is beginning to resort to high-impact modes of action that go beyond the frame of the march or symbolic action. We may well be witnessing a turning point, where the much-feared but predictable frictions of the ecological and environmental transition become manifest, those that emerge from the confrontation of divergent visions of States and of lucid civil societies that refuse to accept the imposed roadmap.
The project as a whole is still in progress, and will focus on these frictions and the joint study of activists and their modes of action. Coming from a retrospective exhibition on the fifth season of action by Soulèvements de la Terre (“Earth uprisings” in English), the photographs presented here are grouped by chapter, each corresponding to a mobilization.