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In the 1970s, Françoise d'Eaubonne stood out in the French intellectual landscape. At 50, she has already won several literary prizes and published around forty novels and essays, but is resuming her militant fight with renewed vigor. She is the first to define ecofeminism, denouncing the common oppression of women and the planet as a consequence of patriarchy. She participated in the actions of the MLF (Women's Liberation Movement), in the creation of the FHAR (Homosexual Revolutionary Action Front) and theorized counter-violence, going so far as to sabotage the construction site of the Fessenheim nuclear power plant. This film presents unpublished documents for the first time. Drawing freely from the manuscripts and photographic archives that she bequeathed to the Memory Institute for Contemporary Publishing, her relatives and researchers, historians and publishers comment on the resonance of her feminist and ecological heritage.
Françoise d'Eaubonne
Self (archive footage)
Marie-Jo Bonnet
Self
Isabelle Cambourakis
Self
Caroline Golblum
Self
Elise Thiébaut
Self
David Dufresne
Self
Alain Lezongar
Self
Vincent d’Eaubonne
Self
Director, Writer
Manon Aubel
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