Yanis Darras 9:07 a.m., February 1, 2024

Christophe Guilluy, geographer, essayist and author of the essay “The dispossessed”, was the guest of La Grande interview Europe 1-CNews. At the microphone of Sonia Mabrouk, he returned to the ever-increasing gap between the French and European elites and the people. And judges that “those who keep society going are the workers”. 

Yellow vests, farmers' blockades... Social movements have multiplied in recent years. In recent days, the farmers' blockades, widely supported by the population, have once again raised the question of representation in France and in Europe.

Operators denounce the multiplication of standards, particularly environmental ones, unfair competition through free trade agreements and their low remuneration. Questioned this Thursday morning on the set of La Grande interview CNews-Europe 1, the geographer and author of the essay "The dispossessed" Christophe Guilluy believes that this movement profoundly marks the break between the people and their representation.

"All academic, audiovisual and cinematographic representations tend to reinforce the idea that metropolisation is the unsurpassable horizon. When I say metropolisation, I say neoliberal model. And that is why all of this is very linked to the

anthropological break between these elites, these superior categories and the people", he judges at the microphone of Sonia Mabrouk. 

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