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In 2008, as the storms of the financial crash blew, Isabelle Fremeaux and Jay Jordan deserted the metropolis and their academic jobs, traveling across Europe in search of post-capitalist utopias. They wanted their art activism to no longer be uprooted.



They arrived at a place French politicians had declared lost to the republic, otherwise know as the zad (the zone to defend): a messy but extraordinary canvas of commoning, illegally occupying 4,000 acres of wetlands where an international airport was planned. In 2018, the 40-year-long struggle snatched an incredible victory, defeating the airport expansion project through a powerful cocktail that merged creation and resistance.



Fremeaux and Jordan blend rich eyewitness accounts with theory, inspired by a diverse array of approaches, from neo-animism to revolutionary biology, insurrectionary writings and radical art history.







Published in collaboration with the Journal of Aesthetics & Protest.


Preface by Marc Herbst

Tempests


Part I: Seeding

Scream —Disobedient Desires—Following

Swallows—Extinction Machine—Rebel Bocage


Part II: Germinating

Departure Lounge—Desertion—Mud and ACAB—Insurrectionary Inhabiting—Building in the Ruins—A Discipline of Attention—Love and Forgetting


Part III: Rooting

Offensive Defense—Everyday Magic—Compos(t)ing Together—Medieval Futurisms—Victory and Revenge—Gambles and Barricades of Paper


Part IV: Flourishing

No Commoning without Commoners—Synergies and Regards—No Commoners without Rituals—Life is Feeling—200 Years of Art and the World Is Getting Worse—An Art of Life


FUCK ‘IT’!


Gratitudes

Notes

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Date de parution

20 novembre 2021

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780745345895

Langue

English

We Are Nature Defending Itself
We need stories of victory! We need stories of transformative imagination and wild adventures that somehow succeed against all odds. Jay and Isabelle think about organising and activism like nobody else. They ve given us more than an account-they ve created a new myth that has the added benefit of being true.
Starhawk
Radical pamphlets to fan the flames of discontent at the intersection of research, art and activism.
Series editor: Max Haiven
Also available
001 Pandemonium: Proliferating Borders of Capital and the Pandemic Swerve Angela Mitropoulos
002 The Hologram: Feminist, Peer-to-Peer Health for a Post-Pandemic Future Cassie Thornton
003
We Are Nature Defending Itself
Entangling Art, Activism and Autonomous Zones
Isabelle Fremeaux and Jay Jordan
First published 2021 by Pluto Press
New Wing, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LA
www.plutobooks.com
Published in collaboration with the Journal of Aesthetics Protest
joaap.org

Copyright Isabelle Fremeaux and Jay Jordan 2021
The right of Isabelle Fremeaux and Jay Jordan to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 4587 1 Paperback
ISBN 978 0 7453 4591 8 PDF
ISBN 978 0 7453 4589 5 EPUB
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England
Simultaneously printed in the United Kingdom and United States of America
Contents
Preface by Marc Herbst
Tempests
Part I: Seeding
Scream
Disobedient Desires
Following Swallows
Extinction Machine
Rebel Bocage
Part II: Germinating
Departure Lounge
Desertion
Mud and ACAB
Insurrectionary Inhabiting
Building in the Ruins
A Discipline of Attention
Love and Forgetting
Part III: Rooting
Offensive Defense
Everyday Magic
Compos(t)ing Together
Medieval Futurisms
Victory and Revenge
Gambles and Barricades of Paper
Part IV: Flourishing
No Commoning without Commoners
Synergies and Regards
No Commoners without Rituals
Life is Feeling
200 Years of Art and the World Is Getting Worse
An Art of Life
FUCK IT !
Gratitudes
Notes
Artist: Amanda Priebe
Preface by Marc Herbst
The entangled and extended autonomous rebel community that comprises the zad, located near the village of Notre-Dame-des-Landes in Brittany, kicked the French state s ass.
They scared off the cops and their courts and ruined some dumb multinational s plans for stupid stuff. There was a time when the heart of this book would simply be a discussion of how the state was forced to come to terms with these rads so that instead of an airport, their squatted homes and farms were allowed to stay.
But, as the reader knows, large and actually meaningful insurrectionary movements are heterogenous beasts. And our authors, Isa and Jay of the Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination (LABOFII), would be the first to say that there are a million ways to tell its story. So, We Are Nature Defending Itself is their story, an ecofeminist book showing how attention to ritual, art and actually existing relations are more than theoretical; the combination of these things is constitutive of their radical success. These things constitute an art that aims toward constructing other livable futures.
Magic happens, bitches.

The zad; a play on a French government acronym, meaning a zone to defend .
4,000 acres of wetland
The dumb idea: building an airport NO ONE NEEDS
Salamanders and tractors
A good idea: to defend a territory, you need to inhabit it
70 squats, over 300 rebel residents
6 years (pretty much) without the state
Cows and barricades
40,000 people occasionally appear to put a halt to the dumb plans
Cheese mongers, a sawmill, radio station, flour mill, and more
Teargas, concussion grenades, rubber bullets, and worse
Tanks and wounds
Songs and ritual
The airport will never be built
A Revenge against the commons and frogs
It is now May 2021, though a manuscript of this book had been delivered to me at the beginning of 2016. At that point it was a nearly complete blow-by-blow of the zad s struggle. The book was originally envisioned as a call to arms for the English-speaking world, to be published by the Journal of Aesthetics Protest , which I co-edit. Eager to go to press, the book s deadline somehow nevertheless kept on being pushed back . . . because the people of the zad kept winning. It became apparent that we wouldn t be publishing a call to arms for a battle yet to come, but rather something else, a reflection on victories.
Before they moved to the zad and became land defenders I had come to know the authors, Jay and Isa, as city creatures: high-achieving university-trained individuals who d excelled in the critical and radical spaces carved from arts and academia. I initially read their critical attention to art in the early drafts of this book as a hold-over from their concerns at that time. As an editor with a long engagement with activist art and theory, I knew them as artivists whose creative activities impacted countless movements. As individuals and together as The Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination (LABOFII), they d applied their skills on a variety of fronts; in the 1990s Jay had collaborated in founding Reclaim the Streets that made a wild party of disruptive protest; which besides ACT-UP is, by our estimation, instrumental in the revival of a popular post-cold-war left. While British-born Jay came to his activities as an artist, French-born Isa arrived in the UK as an academic interested in popular education. Together they founded the LABOFII, a popular education and collaborative arts collective that doesn t do projects, rather, they organize exploratory and participatory experiments in rebellion. They bring artists and activists together to design disobedience. They find ways to live on the edge of art institutions and popular movements that catalyze the carnivalesque as resistance, for instance at G8 and UN Climate Summits, including using clowns, boats, ants, gaming, and bikes.
As is detailed in this book s pages, it was the exhausting episodic and ephemeral nature of these kinds of struggles that drove the authors desertion of the city and drew them to the zad, where a very different way for art, learning, resistance, and doing life in common was possible.
The magic of the zad is its impossible but actual victory that here is accounted for. This book shows us how this victory stems from attention to zones birds, frogs and from the day-to-day and also ritualistic ways its people and networks collectively organized to live there. These things were as much a vital part of the diversity of tactics that allowed the zone to defend itself as the dramatic and combative forms of solidarity that had made headlines. Just because winners get to write authoritative history, we should never assume that other ways of living, being and understanding have evaporated below their victory. Insurrectionary imagination springs from somewhere. The textures of the Black, Brown, Indigenous, queer and feminist, entangled and anarchist, and weird lives we lead constitute a rich set of values, ideals and practices for meaningful and complex beautiful forms of existence. The marginalized are so defined because their stories don t officially count, not because they don t exist.
In this context, the inspiration provided by the Zapatistas intergalactic communiques cannot go unmentioned. They demonstrated that other histories were never annihilated, only hidden from the world. But now, more than 25 years after their inspiring uprising in Chiapas, we are witnessing a subtle generational shift on the wild, more queer, and communitarian side of the anarchist left. Today, the spirituality of Starhawk, horizontalism, and the carnivalesque urban politics of Chris Carlsson are being supplemented by the more heterogenous, socially embedded and also systemically political ideas like adrienne maree brown s emergent strategy, Dean Spade s approach to mutual aid and the Care Collective s focus on the communalization of reproductive labor.
This generational/perspectival shift in radical praxis, knowledge, and community occur as capitalism and its world-ordering collaboration with the most regressive of spirits demonstrates its knowledge that climate change heralds a possible end of worlds-its worlds. So, beside this apocalyptic vision, the social knowledges and practices of those whose worlds already ended or were never properly allowed to begin, emerge as capable of reflecting what we have always-already known. Like the emergent anarchist cantons of Rojava, one thing that this book demonstrates is how eco-feminism is a consequential politics. The struggle of the zad also recalls the movement against the Dakota Access Pipeline (NoDAPL) led by the Standing Rock Sioux of the territories currently known as North and South Dakota. But where both struggles thrive on complex entanglements and solidarities, the zad is an experience of coming into a territory, rather than reconstituting intertribal and intercultural resistance and negotiating sovereignty.
In a neoliberal world, art falsely promises its privileged subjects a sense of moral and political autonomy. In contrast, the zad was playing its own game and acting so that the French state could not but recognize their autonomy. For this reason, I initially made editorial suggestions that it was the zad s culture that mattered in a way that needn t be defined by artistic dimensions. Its culture attended to questions of remedying imbalance, of cultivating entanglement; mirrori

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