Summary: | In recent years, we have witnessed the emergence of environmentalist and feminist movements that are new in their demands and ways of fighting, as well as the visibilisation of vernacular practices that were previously ignored and devalued. This article is based on three examples within these two frameworks: participation in a feminist anti-nuclear march in eastern France, an ethnography of the daily life of a Parisian feminist and ecologist collective, and the monograph of a medicinal and aromatic plant picker in the Drôme. As these cases are a priori remote, this paper successively explores the elements which link them to read together them through the prism of feminism and ecology, despite their particularities which will be underlined in each case.
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