You have entered our Participatory Drift Mode.
Fragments will appear without context. No introduction, no classification, no hierarchy. Each fragment stands on its own. Become an ethnologist for five minutes! Here is your set of working questions:
What kind of world does this fragment suggest?
If everyone lived like this, what kind of world would emerge?
What would change if this way of being became the norm?
What kind of society would grow from this?
What does this way of being make possible?
How does this fragment blur or define the boundary between “nature” and “culture”?
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Once a year, in spring, the composition of the past year is revealed. It appears briefly. A moment to look at it together. Then it recedes again, returning to its den.
So the form remains open, never fixed, leaving space for new variations and future transformations.
Year after year, an ecopoetic archive slowly takes shape. Tracing how perceptions evolve, and how the boundary between “nature” and “culture” may be shifting.
Choose one question, write freely. There is no right answer, no expected form: responses can be brief or more developed, intuitive or reflective. What matters is not explanation, but the way the fragment speaks about the world. You are not outside the experience. You are now part of the field!
We look forward to reading you. Thank you!