editorial for 3 days - harper's magazine€¦ · we used to say that travel broadens the mind,...

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EDITORIAL For these past few months, I’ve been steeped in graphs, statistics, and speeches. There have been highs, lows, ups, downs, crises, reboots, grand notions, faux-arguments, thousands of notes to understand/think about/classify in real time to keep connected to our “augmented reality.” It’s gone by too quickly. We used to say that travel broadens the mind, in which case, my travel was in paper airplanes piloted by Sebastiao Salgado, Günter Wallraff, Philippe Bordas, Jean-François Bizot, Mary McCarthy, Florence Aubenas… And, well, believe it or not, the selection here at Couthures has had the same effect on me. I see myself nibbling, diving into a fountain of youth bubbling over from the séchoirs, surrounded by the humble heroes of our modern age. Mc Solaar Sponsor of the first edition of the festival Design Chloé Laforest Illustrations Séverin Millet Text Thibaut Brugat-Dreux Proofing Sarah Ahnou Colophon Druckhaus Kaufmann (Germany) in June 2016. Organizing journals Media partners Other partners With the support of Olivier Legrain WITH EXHIBITS, SCREENINGS, DISCUSSIONS, THEATER, CONCERTS, COMICS, PHOTOGRAPHY… ALL ON THE BANKS OF THE GARONNE 3 TOPICS IN THE MORNING 3 TOPICS IN THE AFTERNOON 3 SÉCHOIRS 1 VILLAGE FOR 3 DAYS bordas

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EDITORIALFor these past few months, I’ve been steeped in graphs, statistics, and speeches. There have been highs, lows, ups, downs, crises, reboots, grand notions, faux-arguments, thousands of notes to understand/think about/classify in real time to keep connected to our “augmented reality.”It’s gone by too quickly.We used to say that travel broadens the mind, in which case, my travel was in paper airplanes piloted by Sebastiao Salgado, Günter Wallraff, Philippe Bordas, Jean-François Bizot, Mary McCarthy, Florence Aubenas…And, well, believe it or not, the selection here at Couthures has had the same effect on me.I see myself nibbling, diving into a fountain of youth bubbling over from the séchoirs, surrounded by the humble heroes of our modern age.

Mc SolaarSponsor of the first edition of the festival

Design Chloé Laforest

Illustrations Séverin Millet

Text Thibaut Brugat-Dreux

Proofing Sarah Ahnou

Colophon Druckhaus Kaufmann (Germany) in June 2016.

Organizing journals

Media partners

Other partners

With the support of Olivier Legrain

WITH EXHIBITS, SCREENINGS,

DISCUSSIONS, THEATER,

CONCERTS, COMICS,

PHOTOGRAPHY… ALL ON THE BANKS OF THE GARONNE

3 TOPICS IN THE MORNING3 TOPICS IN THE

AFTERNOON

3 SÉCHOIRS

1 VILLAGE

FOR3 DAYS

bord

as

L E S A T E L I E R S D E C O U T H U R E S

INTERNATIONALFESTIVALOF THE LIVING PRESS

Program

JULY 29–31, 2016 AT COUTHURES

SÉCHOIR 1 “Changing prison” + “Participation: a user’s manual” SÉCHOIR 2 “Decoding terror” + “The disrupters” SÉCHOIR 3 “Borders and people” + “Iran unveiled”VILLAGE “Food revolutions”+ other demonstrations…

THE BEACH

INFO

SCHOOL

SÉCHOIR 1SÉCHOIR 2

SÉCHOIR 3

INFOMATION

POPLARS

SCHOOL

SCHOOL “The Little Editorial     Department” for childrenCHURCH Theater and screeningsPOPLARS Photography stroll INFORMATION Ticketing, bookstore, gift shop

ENTRANCE Ticketing, shuttle, gift shop

Refreshments area

Toilets

CHURCH

CAMPGROUND 1

CAMPGROUND 2

ENTRANCE

VILLAGE

4 minutes on foot

toward Meilhan-sur-Garonne

toward

Marmande

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REVOLUTIONSIN FOODIndustry now has a hold on the food supply chain, from farm to table. Is the small farmer going extinct? Can we save our seeds? How can we reestablish the connection between fork and the pitchfork?With Lionel Astruc, Gaspard d’Allens, Marc Dufumier, Martin Esposito, Marion Gervais, Patrick Herman, Anaïs Kerhoas, Marie de Kerouedan, Corinne Lateyron Despagne, Lucile Leclair, Jonathan Nossiter, Maxime de Rostolan, Philippe de Vergnette, Caroline Vignaud.Moderated by Anne-Sophie Novel and Olivier Le Naire.

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9 : 45“Bon appétit…and good luck!”—ProductionQuizA playful and friendly session with the festivalgoers, with some concrete questions to shake up conventional wisdom about the production of our food supply.

10 : 15Where have the real farmers gone?Patrick Herman, Lucile Leclair, Marc Dufumier and Philippe de Vergnette (FDSEA)Round tableWe now talk about agri-business, instead of agricultural production. Technological and economic forces have attempted to streamline living beings, and are antithetical to the old farmers’ idea of intelligent agriculture. How can we put some sense back into this occupation and push back against its excesses?

11 : 45How to save our seeds?Lionel Astruc, Marc Dufumier, Philippe de Vergnette (FDSEA) and Jean-François BerthellotRound tableOur seeds are manipulated, patented, protected. They were once freely traded but are now subject to strict regulation

and financial and commercial negotiations. How can we limit the market’s influence on this precious commodity?

1: 00Anaïs s’en va-t-en guerre [Anaïs Is Going to War]by Marion GervaisDocumentary —ScreeningAnaïs is twenty-four. She lives alone in a little house in the middle of a field in Brittany. She isn’t afraid of the administration, of misogynistic professors, nor of the whims of the era. Nothing can stop her. She is driven by her lifelong dream: to become a farmer.>Followed by a discussion with Anaïs Kerhoas and the director.> In the church

3 : 00Dystopiaby Alexa BrunetScreening with commentaryAn original perspective on French agricultural upheavals, narrated by Patrick Herman. > In the church

5: 00Cultivating your gardenJean-François BerthellotSeed workshopTips for good growing.> In the village

VILLAGE SQUARE – FRIDAY

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2:00“Bon appétit…and good luck!”—EatingQuizA playful question-and-answer session with festivalgoers to get an understanding of how we feed ourselves. We'll also seek some new practices.

2: 30Magrets and CoMarie Kerouedan ReadingTo get us in the eating mood, the author will read a spicy passage from this essay devoted to the “food realities of the southwest [of France].” Hot plate coming through!

2 : 45How to eat well?Caroline Vignaud, Marie Kerouedan, M. de RostolanRound tableOne is a cook unlike any other, the second is a researcher-activist fighting junk food, and the third is a farmer-entrepreneur using permaculture to sow the seeds of the future. Proof—three times over—that alternative eating and living are possible.

4:15Revolutionizing our approach to wine and agriculture

C. Lateyron Despagne, M. Marquet and Nicolas BrunRound tableLa Gironde has the highest use of pesticides of any French department. This wine region, which receives chemical treatments to “ensure its production,” is at the heart of current debates. Is another vine possible?

5: 00Du vin naturel à la production culturelle Mathias Marquet, Jonathan Nossiter and Stéphane PaoliRound tableVoices raised against traditional farming methods inspire a new ecology of culture. Isn't it time to learn from practices in the world of natural wines to challenge the system?

6: 15The wild flavorCaroline Vignaud Cooking worshopPractical tips and recipes from the chef of Le Goût sauvage in Saint-Lô on cooking for health—and the environment.> In the village

SATURDAY – AFTERNOON – VILLAGE SQUARE

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7 :00BreakfastA quiet breakfast in the square

10 :00“Bon appétit…and good luck!”—GrowthQuizA playful and friendly question-and-answer session with the festivalgoers about the best practices to adopt for tranquil growth.

10 : 30Le potager de mon grand-père [My Grandfather's Vegetable Garden]By Martin EspositoDocumentary —ScreeningDirector Martin Esposito lived on landfill scraps for two years to make his shocking documentary condemning our consumption practices. Then he decided to wash his hands of the whole mess. For a year, he moved into his grandfather’s house, where he was taught, in the older man’s garden, the ancient art of organic farming. An experience of exchange, love, and resilience.

> Followed by a discussion between Martin Esposito, Gaspard d’Allens and Lucile Leclair, Lionel Astruc, and Marc Dufumier > In the church (p. 36)

VILLAGE SQUARE – MORNING – SUNDAY

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CHANGING PRISONFrom Guantánamo to privatized American prisons—not to mention our own jails and detention centers—it seems that we can’t conceive of punishment without imprisonment. But alternatives do exist, and they produce results, with stunningly low recidivism rates.With Arne Kvernvik Nilsen, Gabi Mouesca, Nicolas Ferran, Mourad Benchellali, Paul-Roger Gontard, Élisa Portier, Gabrielle Ripplinger, Aïda Chouk, Mouloud Mansouri.

Par Mathieu Palain et Marion Lopez.By Mathieu Palain and Marion Lopez. Exhibition of photos by Espen Eichhöfer, from Prisoners’ Island.

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9 : 00Drawing the jointFleury comicsBreakfast screeningPresentation of comic strips created by inmates at the Fleury-Mérogis prison, with author Farid Boudjellal.

10 : 00Surviving GuantánamoMourad BenchellaliPersonal historyThis is the story of a kid with a bright future, who found himself in an orange jumpsuit at Guantánamo. While there, Mourad Benchellali endured government torture: “I got beatings for no reason, I was humiliated, ice water was thrown on my body with the AC set to the max. They injected things into me without telling me what they were.”

11 :30Prisoner's IslandArne Kvernvik NilsenTestimony and exhibitionThe former director of the prison-island of Bastøy, in Norway, attempts to duplicate the model of an ecological and humanistic prison in Romania.

“I have never believed in the penitentiary system. I do not believe that prison can be a solution for the majority of criminals. On the other hand, I do believe in the essence of the sentence, in what we do with it.”

12 :30Open prisons: a solution?Arne Kvernvik Nilsen et Paul-Roger GontardDiscussionThe ex-director of Norway’s Bastøy prison discusses open prisons with Paul-Roger Gontard, one of the few researchers to take an interest in Casabianda, a prison without bars situated in eastern Corsica, by the edge of the sea. It’s a prison from which one does not escape, which lives on sixty years after its opening, forgotten by the state.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Participation: a user’s manual,” p. 13.

SÉCHOIR 1 – MORNING – FRIDAY

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2 : 00Baumettes' antennaÉlisa Portier Personal history and audio broadcastElisa Portier, a Radio France correspondent, helped create Radio Baumettes in 2002 at a detention center in Marseille. Radio made by inmates, for inmates, with guests from “outside,” as they say on the inside.

3:30Artistic evasionMouloud MansouriPersonal historyMouloud Mansouri was Elisa Portier’s first “intern” at Baumettes. In 2005, he held his first concert in prison. He was released after ten years and now organizes prison concerts with hip-hop artists (IAM, Diam’s, KoolShen, Disiz…) and puts on stand-up shows with the prisoners of the PACA (Provence-Alps-Côte d’Azur) region.

5:00Turning the pageAïda ChoukEncounter She got her start in Seine-Saint-Denis and was head of the magistrates’ union at thirty. But when she returned to Bobigny as a sentencing judge, she began having doubts about the utility of prison. “Some of them come in fragile and leave with a full address book and rage against the ‘system.’ At Bobigny, we do a lot of sentencing adjustments. Whatever the case, the Villepint detention center surpasses every record for overpopulation.”

6:00Camera cocktailsScreeningScreening of photo essays from around the world.

SATURDAY – AFTERNOON – SÉCHOIR 1

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9:00Chasing Bonnie and ClydeBy Olivier Lambert and Thomas SalvaDocumentary—screeningA documentary on Texas’s innovation for reintegrating criminals.

10 :00The combatantGabi MouescaPersonal historyHe’s Basque, and that’s important. He’s fifty-five years old and spent seventeen years in the joint, three of those in solitary, so Gabi Mouesca is familiar with escapes and hunger strikes. Amid a perpetual power struggle with the prison administration, he left his post as president of the International Observatory of Prisons but “continues the combat” for inmates and their families.

11 : 00À l’air libre [In the Open Air]By Nicolas Ferran Documentary—screeningThe film shows life in Moyembrie, a farm in Picardy that welcomes prisoners on work release and is a sort of

transitional space for relearning simple activities: going shopping, taking care of animals, working in groups. The inmates are there to get ready for their release, so that they won’t wind up “alone with some bags on the sidewalk.”> Followed by a discussion with the director.

1: 00Are French prisons in crisis?Gabi Mouesca, Gabrielle Ripplinger, Aïda Chouk and Mouloud MansouriDiscussionRegularly condemned by the European Court of Human Rights for the indignity of its prison system, France continues to build prisons and lock up more people. An overview of a model in crisis and a quest for solutions.

From 2:00 to 16:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Participation: a user’s manual,” p. 15.

SÉCHOIR 1 – MORNING – SUNDAY

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PARTICIPATION: A USER'S MANUALCollaborative initiatives are booming—from coeducation to CSAs, participatory housing to sharing platforms. Which are the most promising? What lessons can the pioneers of self-government transmit to their inheritors?With Fabrice Arfi, Christophe Charlot, Patrick de Saint-Exupéry, Helga Dullenkopf, Véronique Felenbok, Soledad Garnier, Léo Garros, Alice Géraud, Yann Guégan, Guillemette Jacob, Pierre-Carl Langlais, Sandrine Lana, Florence Martin-Kessler, Laurent Mauriac, Fiodor Rilov, Anne-Sophie Novel, Jean Pichinoty, Maxime de Rostolan, Beryl Vigy.By Guillemette Faure and Diouldé Chartier.Exhibition of photos by Cédric Martigny, from La France des bénévoles [France for volunteers].

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2:00How I turned my class upside downSoledad GarnierPersonal historyShe’s known around town as Soledad Garnier. But to the parents and teachers who read her blog, she’s “Madame Flip,” a fourth- and fifth-grade teacher who has her students wear Go Pros, use Twitter, and produce digital content.

3:00L’École nouvelle d’Antony [the New School of Antony], where students and parents are in chargeVéronique Felenbok and her daughtersTestimonial and screeningVéronique Felenbok went from parent to instructor at l’École nouvelle d’Antony, an alternative school that uses cooperative committees (one in each class) to keep students involved in the organization of their academic lives.

4:00Who participates in participatory housing?Helga Dullenkopf, Léo Garros and Marc LaulanieDiscussion and screeningThe former is a member of the Scop Atelier 15 and a network of 150 architects seeking alternative solutions. He’ll present three participatory housing projects currently in development. The latter is the head of the “politics of the city” project at the town hall of Paris’s 18th arrondissement. He’ll explain how politics are opening up to participation by inhabitants.

6:00Être et devenir [Being and Becoming]By Clara BellarDocumentary—screeningStories of parents who have chosen not to send their children to school, who trust them to learn on their own based on what interests them. A tour of four countries: the United States, Germany (where it’s illegal not to go to school), France, and England.

SÉCHOIR 1 – AFTERNOON – FRIDAY

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9:00Uberize me By Christophe CharlotWeb series—screeningFor one month, a Belgian journalist tried to earn a living by working for the new actors in the participatory economy (Airbnb, Deliveroo, Take eat easy, etc.).

10:00The promises and pitfalls of the sharing economy Léo Garros, Sandrine Lana, Anne-Sophie Novel, Jean Pichinoty, Fiodor Rilov, Maxime de Rostolan…Field notesBlue Bees, crowdfunding of green agriculture, the film Tomorrow, a bookstore funded on Ulule, a cooperative grocery store, organic tea produced by former Fralib, the battle of former employeers of Samsonite...In ten minutes, project leaders will tell us about the lessons learned from participatory economics. This workshop is open to anyone who wants to share their victories, large and small, as well as their failures.

12:00When patients change medicineThe Patients’ University, the Seintinelles (Guillemette Jacob), representatives and medical advisors of patient groups.Round tableWhat are patients groups capable of? In order to read a research protocol, you have to be educated. But how do you get an education when you’re sick? Who keeps the data that patients groups collect?Seintinelles is a collaborative research platform that brings together researchers and citizens in order to speed up cancer research. The Patients’ University is a pedagogical tool that is integrated in the university experience of patients suffering from chronic illnesses.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Changing prison,” p. 10.

SATURDAY – MORNING – SÉCHOIR 1

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2:00Wikipedia: a perfect digital democracy? Pierre-Carl LanglaisOpen forumEndives vs. radicchio, the heights of football players, the Fukushima disaster…Pierre-Carl Langlais, a Wikipedia admin, examines what the fights between contributors can show us about the “encyclopedia for dummies.”

3:30What are the new media spaces for readers? With journalists from Briefme, Les Jours, Live Magazine, Mediapart, Rue89, XXIRound tableBetween letters to the editor, Internet comments, crowdfunding, citizen journalism, and social networks, how can individuals today take part in the production of information? A round-the-world poll of experiences and the latest initiatives.

5:30The world according to… Yann GuéganMaps and distoritionsLe Monde, Libération, Sud Ouest , Mediapart, Courrier international, Astrapi, Harper's Magazine, XXI : each publication has its own vision of the world. Yann Guégan, editor of the site “In my lab,” demonstrates the news media’s obsessions and black holes.

SÉCHOIR 1 – AFTERNOON – SATURDAY

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DECODING TERRORThe day after the attacks of November 13, a stunned France realized it was entering a war. The shock passed, leaving a continued state of emergency. What is the upshot of these exceptional measures? Who are the young people joining the ranks of the Islamic State? What do we know about this organization that has turned our analytical framework upside down? What are intelligence services doing to combat this threat?With Mourad Benchellali, Adrienne Charmet, Thomas Dandois, Marie Dosé, Herdir, Wassim Nasr, Arthur Quesnay, Matthieu Suc, David Thomson, François-Xavier Trégan, Yves Trotignon and Tomas van Houtryve.By Mathilde Boussion and Gwendoline Debono.Exhibition photos by Tomas van Houtryve, Quand le ciel est bleu [Blue Sky Days], published for the first time in Harper's Magazine.

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9:30Fact or Fiction? Wassim Nasr DecodingThe Islamic State (Daech) has masterfully expanded the boundaries of terror—and it’s ensconced in rumors. Should we believe everything we hear? Wassim Nasr, who specializes in jihadist movements for France 24, does some sifting.

10:15Jihad on creditDavid ThomsonAccountDavid Thomson, a journalist at RFI, has spent four years talking to young jihadis. He presents portraits of the new believers, who are buying their tickets to Syria on credit.

11:00Jihadis' wivesMatthieu Suc AccountFor six years, Matthieu Suc worked on human-interest sto-ries. Circumstances eventually led him to the terrorism beat, and he began looking into the women who shared their lives with the Charlie Hebdo killers.

11 :45Predicting the outcomeMourad BenchellaliPersonal historyHe’s seen the prisons of Al-Qaida, Guantánamo, and Fleury-Mérogis. Mourad Benchellali, sent to Afghanistan by his brother in 2001, has always claimed it was all a big misunderstanding. For a long time no one wanted to listen to him. But today his inbox is flooded with appeals for assistance.

12:30IntermissionThe speakers will respond to your questions.

1:00Is the Islamic State revolutionary?Wassim Nasr, Arthur Quesnay and Yves Trotignon DiscussionMilitary strategy, recruitment tactics, communication: the Islamic State is defying all expectations. A journalist, a researcher, and an intelligence specialist examine the situation.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this Séchoir will host the workshop “The Disrupters,” p. 21.

SÉCHOIR 2 – MORNING – FRIDAY

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2:00My client is cracking upMarie DoséPersonal historyMarie Dosé, an attorney admitted to the bar in Paris, has represented dozens of people under house arrest. Botched raids, random targeting, strong-arm tactics—welcome to the daily absurdities of the emergency-security state.

3:00Every state of emergencyAdrienne Charmet and Yves TrotignonDiscussionThe former, a spokesperson for La Quadrature du Net [an organization advocating for internet free speech and privacy rights], spends her time defending digital rights. The latter wiled away ten years in intelligence services. Both of them despair of “total security.”

4:00CryptopartyHerdirHands-on workshop“To get a driver’s license, you have to take a test, right? Well, same thing here. People go on the internet without knowing

how to work the clutch.” Herdir is what you call a data lover: he gives the masses lessons in data protection, without requesting anything in exchange. Step by step, he’ll demonstrate how to secure your smartphone, encrypt your emails, and navigate the Web without being tracked.

6 : 00Blue Sky DaysTomas van HoutryvePhotojournalism—ScreeningAt least 400 civilians have been killed by drone strikes in Pakistan since 2004. To bear witness to this reality for Harper's Magazine, Tomas van Houtryve affixed his camera to a quadcopter. From the skies of America, he has photographed gatherings similar to the ones America targets abroad.

SATURDAY – AFTERNOON – SÉCHOIR 2

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9:30Another look at the Saint-Denis attacksMatthieu Suc AccountAccording to the Ministry of Interior, during the attacks of November 18 on Saint-Denis, security forces “took fire for hours under conditions never before encountered.” Three months later, journalist Matthieu Suc revealed that out of the thousands of shots fired that day, only eleven have been attributed to the terrorists.

10:30Daech, paroles de déserteurs [The deserters’ account of Daech]By Thomas Dandois and François-Xavier TréganDocumentary—ScreeningThey have names like Abou Oussama, Abou Maria, Abou Ali.... Now these ex-soldiers of the “Caliphate” recount their lives under the Islamic State, from restored electricity to theology courses to Islamic tribunals to the abuses that led them to flee. > Followed by a discussion with the filmmakers.

12:00Help, they’re coming back!David ThomsonEncounterThis spring, 250 French citizens reportedly left the Islamic State. Why did they decide to jump ship? How will France manage these returnees? Should we be afraid of them?

1:00Intelligence must be savedYves Trotignon and Matthieu SucAccountsIntelligence services are struggling on the front lines against terrorists. Matthieu Suc, a journalist at Mediapart, and Yves Trotignon, an ex-diplomat and former employee of the DGSE [General Directorate for External Security], review a system overwhelmed by threats.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “The Disrupters,” p. 23.

SÉCHOIR 2 – MORNING – SUNDAY

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THE DISRUPTERS“Afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted.” This American journalistic maxim also applies to the citizens who feed the media and the public sphere with their news, points of view, works, and innovations. Occasionally they even manage to overthrow a system.With Irène Frachon, Fabrice Arfi, Azyz Amami, Guillaume Ancel, Nadia Khiari (Willis From Tunis), Nicolaï Kobliakov, Kamel Daoud, Flore Vasseur, Ryad Boulanouar, The Yes Men.By Augustin Scalbert and Claire Richard.Exhibition of photos by Nidaa Badwan, from Gaza in Colors.

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2:00Refusing corruption in Putin's RussiaNicolaï Kobliakov Personal historyUntil 2015, this Soviet-born businessman, who has taken refuge in France for a decade, had an Interpol Red Notice out for his arrest and a request for his extradition from the Russian government—all because he was fighting against corruption and for democracy in his country.

3:00The bank breakerRyad Boulanouar Personal historyIn the span of five minutes in a corner store, you can get a debit card and a bank account number, in exchange for 20 euros in fees per year. Ryad Boulanouar’s Nickel account is attractive both to the financially insecure who have been rejected by banks and to banks’ traditional clients who are fed up with high fees.

4:00Disrupting across the globeFlore VasseurPortraitsFlore Vasseur, a graduate of HEC (Hautes Etudes Commerciales), started out in marketing, but

after 9/11, she changed direction and began writing novels, depicting the vagaries of the politico-economic elite and meeting people trying to effect change: Julian Assange, Naomi Klein, Laura Poitras… Portraits of women and men who are shaking things up.

5:00Dismantling the systemAzyz Amami, Flore Vasseur and Ryad BoulanouarDiscussionVerbal, written, face to face… What techniques can we utilize to unravel the logic of the current economic system’s disciples. A few disrupters’ tips and tricks.

6:00The Yes Men Are Revoltingd’Andy Bichlbaum and Mike BonannoScreening and cocktailsTwo American activists trick economic and political decision-makers to repudiate their contributions to climate change.

SÉCHOIR 2 – AFTERNOON – FRIDAY

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9:00Cartoonists, foot soldiers of democracyBy Stéphanie Valloatto and Radu MihaileanuDocumentary—ScreeningThis film by Stéphanie Valloatto, co-written by Radu Mihaileanu and released in 2014, follows twelve members of Cartooning for Peace, all of different nationalities, including Nadia Khiari, a Tunisian.

10:00The end of a dictatorship, and beyondWillis From TunisAccount In 2011, Nadia Khiari achieved worldwide renown, without having really sought it out, shortly after her first publication. She charts her trajectory and her country’s evolution by presenting a selection of her sketches: authoritarianism, Islamism, elitism…nothing escapes her fierce hand.

11 :00“Hacktivate” your countryAzyz AmamiPersonal historyAzyz Amami, who became a figure of the Tunisian revolution at the age of 27, has since

high school been subjected to censorship, jailing, and torture. While passing along a few methods for “hacking” the system, he discusses some of his struggles, and how yesterday’s allies—Facebook, Google, and Twitter—can be transformed into adversaries. Live drawings by Willis from Tunis.

12 :30A bull in many China shopsFabrice Arfi Personal historyThe Cahuzac Affair, Woerth-Bettencourt, Sarkozy-Qaddafi, Karachi… These Mediapart scoops have shaken up governments, politics, justice systems, and the media. Fabrice Arfi reveals some behind-the-scenes details and recounts how he has personally made it through the turbulence he’s stirred up.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Decoding terror,” p. 18.

SATURDAY – MORNING – SÉCHOIR 2

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2:00Syria: showing horrorAccountGarance Le Caisne In 2014, photos by “César,” demonstrating terrifying evidences of the atrocities of Bashar al-Assad’s regime, were seen across the world. “César,” a military photographer, risked his life by distributing these images. Journalist Garance Le Caisne recounts her encounter with him, and with this horror.

3:00Mediator : giving voice to victimsPersonal historyIrène Frachon In revealing the Mediator scandal, Irène Frachon, a pulmonologist, showed the courage to confront a powerful laboratory and health authorities; but the thing that has stayed with her the most is her relationships with the victims. Using their words and hers, she gives voice to those whose suffering was caused by a medication—and a system.

4:00The genocide of the Tutsis : a counterhistoryGuillaume Ancel Personal historyA young officer in 1994, he was there and he saw it: France protected the Rwandan regime, whose million victims would remain buried in the horror of history. This assertion, supported by journalists, humanitarians, military officers, and the current government of Rwanda, is now problematic for France and its decision-makers of the time, including Alain Juppé and Hubert Védrine.

5:00Lives of pressure, threats, and violenceGuillaume Ancel, Azyz Amami, Fabrice Arfi, Kamel Daoud, Irène Frachon, Nicolaï Kobliakov, Garance Le CaisnePersonal historiesWhether they’re up against the army, the government, religion, the pharmaceutical industry, or the worldwide impact of an unconfirmed revelation… The speakers will recount, among other things, one moment of anxiety out of many, and how they got over it.

SÉCHOIR 2 – AFTERNOON – SUNDAY

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BORDERS AND PEOPLEThousands of women, men, and children—pushed out by war, crisis, thirst—leave their countries each year to try for a new life somewhere else. But in a globalized world, they often find the doors are bolted shut, with walls erected around territories and within people’s spirits. With Amer Ahmad, Cécile Allegra, Claire Billet, Kamel Daoud, Alice Diop, Corentin Fohlen, Hippolyte, Hedwige Jeanmart, Olivier Jobard, Sara Kol, Scholastique Mukasonga, Tobie Nathan, Camilla Panhard, Steve Tientcheu.By Léna Mauger and Aurélie Charon.Exhibition of photos by Janet Jarman, from Marisol.

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9:30Breakfast with photosScreening

10:00Voyage en Barbarie [A trip to Barbaria]By Cécile Allegra and Delphine DelogetDocumentary —screeningSince the Arab Spring, the Sinai has been transformed into an immense torture center. Thou-sands of Eritreans fleeing dic-tatorship have been kidnapped by Bedouins. More than 10,000 have not returned.. > Followed by a talk with one of the directors.

11:30In their eyes — no. 1Screening with commentaryPhoto reportage: “Des châteaux en Roumanie” [Châteaux in Romania] by Petrut Calinescu.

11:45Changing identityTobie NathanPersonal historyTo migrate is to lie. You have to rewrite your history in order to begin another. For forty years, Nathan, an ethnopsychiatrist, has treated migrants, and it has altered his own identity.

12:30In their eyes — no. 2Screening with commentaryPhoto reportage: “Perdre la raison face aux barbelés” [“Driven mad by barbed wire”] by Bülent Kılıç.

12:45The border for womenCamilla Panhard, with HippolyteComics immersionOver the past twenty-five years, the number of migrants has doubled worldwide. One of the most dangerous areas on the planet is the border between the United States and Mexico. Each year, hundreds of women disappear. For five years, Camilla Panhard threw herself into this no man’s land where everyone’s life is at risk. The comic artist Hippolyte will do a live illustration of her story.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Iran unveiled,” p. 25.

SÉCHOIR 3 – MORNING – FRIDAY

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2 :00Europe, land of dreams and barbed wireClaire Billet and Olivier JobardAccountsKingsley, a Cameroonian, risks his life to get to France. Meanwhile, five Afghans cross 7,500 miles… For the past fifteen years, Billet and Jobard have been following migrants in exile. We’ll hear of extraordinary journeys, and the implicit tale of an area that’s closing itself off.

3:00In their eyes — no. 3Screening with commentaryPhoto reportage: “Que ferais-je si ce bébé était à moi?” [“What would I do if this were my baby?”] by Ozan Kose.

3:15Get out of here…MC SolaarTestimonialBorn in Dakar to Chadian parents, MC Solaar grew up in the banlieues of Paris in a “northern…hard-core neighborhood.” After spending time in Egypt, he returned to France and dove into hip-hop. Twenty years later, he continues to take inspiration from wandering, pulling ideas and little bits of culture into the territories that intrigue him.

4:15Murmurings of exileScholastique Mukasonga, with HippolytePersonal historyIn 1994, the year of the genocide of Rwanda’s Tutsis, Scholastique lost 27 members of her family. The author recounts her internal exile.

5:00The view from OranKamel DaoudAccountKamel Daoud, a journalist for Le Quotidien d’Oran, is the author of The Meursault Investigation, a counterpoint to Albert Camus’s The Stranger. From Algeria, the author has been watching Europe tear itself apart.

5:45Danton's DeathSteve TientcheuTestimonialSteve grew up in the projects. His dream was to be an actor and to perform in Danton’s Death. But his theater professor at school explained to him that there are roles for white people and others for black people…

6:30Camera cocktailsScreening

SATURDAY – AFTERNOON – SÉCHOIR 3

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9:30La permanence [On Call]By Alice DiopDocumentary—screeningAt Avicenne hospital, in Bobigny, Doctor Geeraert sees migrants whose maladies can often be traced to the pain of exile. Over the course of a year, the director filmed his consultations. > Followed by a talk with the director and Tobie Nathan.

11 H 30In their eyes — no. 4Screening with commentaryPhoto reportage: “Ni Allah ni maître” [“Neither Allah nor master”] by Corentin Fohlen.

11 H 45Syria, a burnt landAmer Ahmad and Sara KolPersonal historyAmer, a journalist, participated in the Syrian revolution in the spring of 2011 and met Sara, a student of English. Arrested and jailed three times by Bashar al-Assad’s regime, Amer fled on foot. The couple has now taken refuge in Paris.

12 H 45In their eyes — no. 5Screening with commentaryPhoto reportage: “Badanti” by Roberta Valerio.

1:00In search of DilaraHedwige JeanmartAccountIn 2014, Russia annexed Crimea, a province of Ukraine. In the months since, Jeanmart hasn’t had any news of her friend Dilara. The author goes looking for her.

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Iran unveiled,” p. 31.

SÉCHOIR 3 – MORNING – SUNDAY

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IRAN UNVEILEDOver the past twenty-five years, the number of migrants has doubled worldwide. One of the most dangerous areas on the planet is the border between the United States and Mexico. Each year, hundreds of women disappear. For five years, Camilla Panhard threw herself into this no man’s land where everyone’s life is at risk. The comic artist Hippolyte will do a live illustration of her story. With Abbas, Armin Arefi, Élise Caron, Amir Hassan Cheheltan, Sarah Doraghi, Mehdi Jahandar, Mana Neyestani,

Jean-Pierre Perrin and Ahmad Salamatian.

By Marion Quillard and Delphine Minoui.Exhibition of photos by Jeremy Suyker, from Les Insolents de Téhéran.

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2:00Special correspondent – no. 1Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-upPerrin, a veteran journalist for Libération, has been going to Iran since 1980. He recounts his favorite memories and most improbable encounters in six small sketches.

2:15No Land’s SongBy Ayat NajafiFilm – screeningIn Iran, women do not have the right to sing in mixed company. In spite of this, a female composer endures long negotiations with censors as she undertakes a project to bring three Iranian women and three French women to a stage in Tehran.> Followed by a discussion with Élise Caron, one of the singers in the film, who describes the production. Then Amir Hassan Cheheltan, a writer in Tehran, revisits his own experience of censorship.

5:00IntermissionCome meet the participants in the Iran Unveiled workshop and get the chance to ask them all your questions.

5:30The journalist and the mullahDelphine Minoui and Mehdi JahandarAccountWhen she was a correspondent in Tehran, Delphine became friends with a mullah. One day, he came to her wearing a leather jacket, with a tender offer on his lips. The journalist and the mullah are reuniting again for the first time at Couthures. An unlikely encounter, focused on love and religion.

6:15Camera cocktailsScreeningA perfect moment to have a glass and get acquainted with the best in Iranian photography.

SÉCHOIR 3 – AFTERNOON – FRIDAY

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9:30Breakfast with photosScreeningPhotojournalism served up with tea and pastries, for a tranquil start to the day.> With photographer Jeremy Suyker.

10:00My revolutionAbbasAccount—screeningAbbas, a member of the Magnum photography agency, covered the Islamic Revolution of 1979. He goes back through his archives and recounts the birth of a regime that has survived a series of crises.

11:00IntermissionJoin in a discussion with the séchoir participants—whether they’ve frustrated, intrigued, or delighted you!

11:30Special correspondent — no. 2Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-upPerrin, a veteran journalist for Libération, has been going to Iran since 1980. He recounts his favorite memories in six small sketches.

11:45Because of a cockroachMana NeyestaniPersonal history—drawingIn 2006, Neyestani published a drawing of a cockroach speaking an Azerbaijani word—and sparked protests. Twelve people died amid the regime’s repressive response. Ten years later, this cartoonist, forced into exile, draws her own story.

12:15Special correspondent — no. 3Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-up

12:30An illusive openingArmin ArefiPersonal historyArefi, a journalist who was forced to leave Iran in 2007, finally made it back a few months ago. At Couthures, he questions the supposed opening up of his country. What has really changed in Tehran?

1:30Special correspondent — no. 4Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-up

From 2:00 to 6:00, this séchoir will host the workshop “Borders and people,” p. 30.

SATURDAY – MORNING – SÉCHOIR 3

31

2:00Special correspondent — no. 5Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-upPerrin, a veteran journalist for Libération, has been going to Iran since 1980. He recounts his favorite memories and most improbable encounters in six small sketches.

2:15Red RoseBy Sepideh FarsiFilm—screeningIt’s June of 2009, and young people are in the streets. A protestor tweeting the revolution encounters a man twenty years her senior, shut away in his apartment in the upscale northern part of Tehran. A love story between two revolutionaries.> Followed by a conversation with Ahmad Salamatian, a former politician who became a bookseller in Paris. What was the name of this revolt?

4:15What a poem!Delphine MinouiAccountIn Iran, people talk in quatrains, argue in verse, resist in poems,

and bargain in metaphors, whether in the bazaar or in nuclear talks. We’ll open to a random page of Hafez’s Divan, select a poem, and read our futures between its lines.

4:45A funny kind of exileSarah DoraghiOne-woman showDoraghi, who came to France at the age of ten, recounts her adaptation in a one-woman show all “based on a true story.”

6:00Special correspondent — no. 6Jean-Pierre PerrinStand-up

6:15Camera cocktailsScreeningBefore the end of the festival, come have a glass and get acquainted with the best in Iranian photography.

SÉCHOIR 3 – AFTERNOON – SUNDAY

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SCHOOLTHE LITTLE EDITORIALDEPARTMENTThe Couthures festival is an opportunity for our youngest to try on the outfit of minireporters. We’ll put them behind cameras, give them paintbrushes, markers, and microphones. Let the adventure begin!By Annie Cabrera and Virginie Blanc.

> The festival is free for children under 12. The studio is open to children ages 5 to 12 (subject to space limitations). Registration goes from 9:00 a.m. and takes place at the entrance to the studio (the village school). You may register for either a half day or a full day (lunch not included).

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The festival gazettePutting together a newspaperWorking in teams, on the Couthures grounds, the kids will learn the ropes of reporting by creating their own newspaper. They’ll have meetings and conduct interviews with the séchoir participants, and will be encouraged to get a better understanding of the world, while having fun in the process.

Photographes-in-trainingPhoto studioA hands-on photography workshop using the world’s simplest device: the pinhole camera. We’ll explore every stage in the creation of an image: from constructing the camera to framing a shot to developing prints. Later, we’ll exhibit our creations.

A Couthures documentaryDocumentary productionIn this workshop, we’ll explain the basic elements of a multimedia documentary. The kids will produce a Couthures documentary special. They’ll serve as the writers, the journalists, and the crew.

And many other activities…

Milan Presse, which specializes in

youth publishing, will offer media

education workshops to children

ages 5 to 12, with editors in chief,

journalists, photographers,

and designers from a variety of

magazines: GEO Ado, Julie, Wapiti,

Toupi, and Toboggan.

The workshops will provide a

fun and exciting way for kids

to learn about journalism.

N° 109 – Du 1er au 7 avril 2016 – 1,65 €

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Halte au gaspillage alimentaire !La bataille contre le gaspillage de la nourriture a commencé ! Depuis le 3 février dernier, une loi interdit aux supermarchés de jeter des ali-ments qui peuvent encore être consommés. C’est une grande avan-cée, car 10 millions de tonnes de fruits, de pain et de plats préparés partent chaque année à la poubelle, en France. Une énorme quantité, qui

coûte cher au porte-monnaie et à l’environnement. Mais si les grandes surfaces sont en partie responsables, c’est nous tous qui gaspillons le plus, tous les jours, à la maison ou à la can-tine. Alors, à la rentrée prochaine, dans les écoles, les élèves appren-dront comment mieux man ger, moins jeter… Et tous les bons réfl exes pour consommer plus malin demain !

PJAC

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Cha ue semaine, ton journal d’actu

www.1jour1actu.com

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Déplie ton journal et retrouve les chiffres du gaspillage alimentaire

JACN0109P001.indd 1

30/03/16 11:35

MILAN 09:37:24 Mars 30, 2016 _03CW5_JACN0109P001.pdf

N° 103 – Du 12 au 18 février 2016 – 1,65 €

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Calais : l’école d’urgence Ils s’appellent Hano, Sava, Nali, Maziar, Lia... Ils ont 5 ans, 6 ans, 9 ans, 11 ans... Et s’ils gardent leur manteau en classe, c’est parce que leur école est un baraquement de bois sans chauffage. Pourtant, cette école les met à l’abri de la pluie et du vent. Et dans l’immense bidonville de Calais où ils survivent, l’école est le seul

endroit où ils ont une vie « normale ». Ces enfants sont des migrants. Fuyant la guerre, ils ont quitté leur pays avec leur famille et parcouru des milliers de kilomètres pour tenter de rejoindre l’Angleterre. Mais leur chemin s’est arrêté en France, face à la mer, dans le port de Calais. 1jour1actu est allé à leur rencontre. PJ

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Pour uoi tant de migrants à Calais ? Lire page suivante

Au sein du camp de Calais, des bénévoles ont créé

une école d’urgence pour les enfants migrants. où ils survivent, l’école est le seul

Pour

Cha ue semaine, ton journal d’actu

www.1jour1actu.com

DÈS 8 ANS

JACN0103P001.indd 1 10/02/16 11:29MILAN 10:30:21 Février 10, 2016 _0290G_JACN0103P001.pdf

This is also an opportunity

to become acquainted with

1jour1actu, the first cross-

platform publication that takes on

the news for children.

34

A DAY IN THE VILLAGEARTE RadioCinema in my earsAudio reports that are fun, poetic, political. Cinema for the ears presented by Silvain Gire.> Every day at 11:00 and 4:00 at the hangar near the school.

Family portraitsOutdoor studioGet your family portraits taken by professional photographers…> Daily next to the school

FRIDAY3:00The metamorphoses of the pressArrêt sur images, Books, Courrier international, Les Jours, and MediapartField notesThe press is reinventing itself. These five organizations have all set off in different directions. > Village stage

4:00ReadingMarie Desplechin, Scholastique Mukasonga and Jean-Claude Guillebaud

Two novelists and an essayist lend their voicesto stories and testimonies.> Village stage

4:45Disco Soup CouthuresTasty fruit and disco!> Village stage

SATURDAY10:00ReadingMarie Desplechin, Scholastique Mukasonga Two novelists lend their voicesto stories and testimonies.> Village stage

11:00Art, creator of the universeArt Spiegelman with John R. MacArthur and Patrick de Saint-ExupéryEncounterArt Spiegelman, author of the cult-classic comic Maus (winner of the Pulitzer), recounts his history and talks about his undertakings.> Village stage

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5:00One-on-one with the press #1Speed datingGet to know one of the journalists from Arrêt sur images, Books, Courrier international, Les Jours, and Mediapart. Ask them anything!

> In the village

SUNDAYPhotography strollGuided tours with the exhibition photographers Sulina, Balkan Transit, La Famille [The Family], and Africa America.> At 11:00, 2:00, 3:00, and 4:00

2:00One-on-one with the press #2Speed datingAsk them anything!

> In the village

PHOTO EXHIBITS

Sulina, Julien Pebrel> On the dock> Guided tour Sunday at 11:00

Balkan Transit, Olivier Jobard> In the poplar grove> Guided tour Sunday at 2:00

La famille, Alain Laboile> In the village> Guided tour Sunday at 3:00

Water Stories, M. Abdulaziz> On the church walls

Africa America, P. Guionie> In the poplar grove> > Guided tour Sunday at 4:00

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IN THE CHURCHFRIDAY

40 photo storiesWith the Lumix festivalPhoto essay screeningStories from around the world projected onto a giant screen.> at 9:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:00

5:00On n’est pas que des valises ou l’épopée des salariés de Samsonite[We are more than luggage, or the epic of the Samsonite employees]d’Hélène DesplanquesReality theater>The incredible story of Samsonite employees in Hénin-Beaumont.Their factory was closed: total liquidation, fraud… With the help of an attorney, Fiodor Rilov, the workers took this American multinational corporation to court. This is a true story, a modern tale. The workers-actors take to the stage to recount

ten years of struggle. On the other side is Mitt Romney, star of the financial markets.> Stage direction: Marie Liagre – Actors: the former factory employees. > A custom-made theatrical form, in an exclusive production for Couthures, before the premiere this fall.

SATURDAY40 photo storiesWith the Lumix festivalPhoto essay screeningStories from around the world projected onto a giant screen.> at 9:00, 1:00, 7:00, 9:00

11:30Résistance naturelle [Natural resistance]de Jonathan NossiterDocumentary—screeningIn the tradition of Mondovino, Jonathan Nossiter goes off in search of Italian vintners making natural wines. An intimate reflection on the lives and visions of these “resistance fighters.” A politically committed and poetic film.

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3:00The New Yorker drops its coverFrançoise Mouly with Stéphane PaoliConference—screeningThe artistic director of the New Yorker, one of the oldest American magazines, shares her experiences and explains the priorities involved in artistic creation.

5:00Je suis prêt [I am ready]By Sarah TickDocumentary theater> Confessions of a reformed drug smuggler, inspired by the documentary El Sicario, Room 164, by Gianfranco Rosi.In a hotel room, a hooded hit man tells his secrets. He describes a twenty-year clandestine criminal life, during which, after having been a member of the local police force, he tortured, kidnapped, and killed more than a hundred people.> Artistic collaboration: Sarah Tick from the troupe Le Chant des Rives – Adaptation/performance: Thomas Matalou from the collective ADM – Stage management: Julien Crepin/Francois Dugest.

SUNDAY40 photo storiesAvec le festival LumixScreening de photoreportagesDes accounts du monde entier projetés sur écran géant.> at 9:00, 1:00, 4:30

3:00Jusqu’au bout [Up to the Edge]By Éric Bouvet ReadingIn Chechnya, photojournalist Éric Bouvet reached the limits of sanity, and went to the edge of madness. His photos and text bear witness not only to the horror he witnessed, but also to a desire for humanity. Immersed in the conflict, he began to feel the need to come back with words and images showing the necessity of survival. The form and content of his work recount a desire for life in the midst of hellish conflict.> Discussion with Éric Bouvet after the reading.

EVENINGFRIDAY6:00Free formMC Solaar SidebarMC Solaar welcomes to the stage the people he’s met, and who have had an impact on him, over the course of the day…> Village stage

8:00A live show of true storiesLive MagazineMagazine performanceJournalists, photographers, directors, and writers come onstage to tell crazy-but-true stories. > In the church

9:00Agar Agar / Cracki RecordsConcertClara and Armand, a young duo whose rhythmic music recalls the eighties > Village stage

10:00Faire ConcertPsychedelic guitars with a disco beat> Village stage

10:00FatimaBy Philippe FauconFilm—screeningOne day, Fatima, a single mother, falls in a stairwell… While on a leave of absence from work, she begins writing in Arabic the things she has never been able to say to her daughters in French.> Séchoir 3

12:00DJ Tonanz aka Augustin S.DJ set DISTURBERSCelebrating a disruptive musical century!> In the field

1:30PAKODJ set> In the field

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SATURDAY6:00Free formMC Solaar SidebarMC Solaar welcomes to the stage people he's met throughout the day.> Village stage

9:00The sponsor’s stylingsMC SolaarConcertScholar Maurice Druon once described him as having “revived poetry”: Claude M’Barali, better known as MC Solaar, is an unusual artist. He’s a pioneer of French rap and a lover of words, and he brings a smooth flow to the whole range of hip-hop sound.> Village stage

10:30Le Client [The Client]By Asghar FarhadiFilm—preciew screeningForced out of their apartment in Tehran, Emad and Rana move into a new building. An incident involving the former tenant will upend the young couple’s life.> Séchoir 3

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10:30Babel / MIK ProdConcertFour musicians take on French music, adding in a little touch of electro…> Village stage

12:00DJ set by nightPAKOConcert> In the field

SUNDAY4:00Good Bal Marylou Dance partyWith a bandGive yourself a proper sendoff. Until 7.> Village stage

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Maryline Drouault ; Jean-Yves Droval ; Florence du Buisson Perrine ; Aurélia Dubois ; Marie Dubois ; Florent Dubray ; Chloé Dubset ; Christian Dubur ; Quentin Duckit ; Thomas Duclert ; Guillaume Dufresne ; Annie Dumont ; Cédric Dumont ; Laëtitia Dunogeant ; Aurélien Dupas ; Maelle Dupont ; Sophie Dupressoir ; Manon Durieux ; Sandrine Edery ; Pauline Eiferman ; Dounia El Guasmi ; Malika Elkord ; Marguerite Eloy ; Elsa Vasseur ; Delpeyrat Emilie ; Catherine Emonnot ; Sarah Ennemoser ; Pierre Estérie ; Lucie Etonno ; Fabienne Pompey ; Élisabeth Fabry ; Béatrice Fabry ; Christian Fages ; Guillaume Faure ; Mireille Faure ; Guillemette Faure ; Monique Favriou ; Matti Faye ; Émilie Fenaughty ; Francine Fenet ; Flavie Ferchaud ; Camille Feret ; Rémy Fière ; Lise Fievet Mailhebiau ; Georges Fischer ; Christine Flamant ; Bruno Floquet ; Corentin Fohlen ; Céline Forget ; Sara Fougeres ; Catherine Fougerouse ; Fabienne Fouqué ; Jean-François Fournel ; Alice Fournier ; Gwenaël Fradin ; José-Alain Fralon ; Thomas Francoual ; Alain Friedel ; Françoise Fromage ; Anne-Marie Frossard ; Marco Gabutti ; Camille Gachot ; Mathilde Gall ; Yaël Gambarotto ; Béatrice Garcher ; Sophie Garcia ; Suzy Garnier ; Clara Garnier-Amouroux ; Pascaline Garnot ; Cécile Gateff ; Édith Gatuing ; Marie-Agnès Gaudrat ; Agnès Gaudu ; Nicole Gauthier ; Jean-Matthieu Gautier ; Valérie Gautier ; Ariane Geffard ; David Geiss ; Suzanne Gellée ; Mélissa Genevois ; Laurianne Gerald ; Gabrielle Gerard ; Caroline Gillet ; Roxanne Gintz ; Marine Girard ; Anaël Giraudeau ; Anne-Sophie Girault ; Frédéric Gleyze ; Bertrand Gobin ; Marc Gonnet ; Livia Gonzalves ; Nouara Goubelly ; Camille Gouyou Beauchamps ; Pierre Grall ; Nadine Grandperrin ; Marjolaine Grappe ; Grégoire Grau ; Christine Grave ; Noémie Gressier ; Christel Grimaud ; Rachel Grunstein ; Josiane Guéguen ; Thierry Guerin ; Louis Guérin ; Emmanuel Guibert ; Élodie Guichaux ; Josselyn Guillarmou ; Fabienne Guillataud ; Jean-Claude Guillebaud ; Xavier et Sylvie de Guillebon ; Olivier Guillemin ; Lise Guillotin ; Christine Guillouet-Drapenski ; Martine Guimot ; Maiwenn Guiziou ; Flore Gurrey ; Sophie Guyot ; lisa Haberer ; Raquel Hadida ; Véronique Hanseler ; Marie France Hanseler-Croce Spinelli ; Thomas Hassid ; Bernard Hasson ; Laurence Haxaire ; Catherine et Olivier Heintz ; David Hervieu ; Magali Hirn ; Maël Hodeau ; Jean-Louis Hodeau-Guillot ; Chloé Hofmann ; Famille Hollebecq Flamant ; Marion Hislen ; Sophie Hostein ; Bernadette Hourdebaigt ; Nina Hubinet ; Matthias Humt ; S. Husson ; Adèle Hybre ; Lucile Ichi ; Éloïse Idil ; Anthony Ikni ; Véronique Ingold ; Claire Isambert ; Martine Jacot ; Léopold Jacqueline ; Julien Jacquet ; Pauline Jallon ; André Jarno ; Chrystel Jeandot ; Jessica Jeffries ; Laurie Joanou ; Eva Joly ; Olivier Joly ; Guillaume Josselin ; Olivier Joulain ; Jenny Joussemet ; Stéphanie Jouve ; Jonas Kaminski ; Patrick Kaminski ; Walid Kanoun ; Michel Knibiehly ; Charlotte Knibiehly ; Francis Kochert ; Claude Kraenker ; Nathalie La Noë ; Hélène Labbé de Montais ; Isabelle Labeyrie ; Alain Laboile ; François Labrouillère ; Jeanne Lacaille ; Élise Lacaze ; Aurelie Lacouchie ; Laurence Lacour ; Nicole Laffitte ; Charlotte Laffitte ; Fred Laffont ; Caroline Laforest ; Chloé Laforest ; Christian et Isabelle Laforest ; Dominique Lagabrielle ; Dorothée Lagabrielle ; Odile Lagacherie ; Anne Lagarde ; Hubert Lagarde ; Nathalie Lagarde ; Emmanuelle Lam-Lafont ; Jacques Lamalle ; Olivier Lambert ; Louise Lamothe ; Philippe Lamotte ; Sandrine Lana ; Lancelot d’Hauthuille ; Maxime Lancien ; Hélène Langlade ; Joëlle Lapeyre ; Nadine Larnaudie ; Gaëlle Laroque ; Ninon Larroque ; Louise Larroque ; Josée Lartet-Geffard ; Aline Lateule ; Marine Launier ; Laura Cailloux ; Chloé Laurent ; Caroline Laurent-Simon ; Marie-Christine Laval ; Bernard Laval ; Marie-Laure Lavergne ; Sébastien Le Clézio ; Clarisse Le Cocq ; Gwenn Le Corgne ; Anaëlle Le Fringère ; Anne-Marie Le Mat ; Olivier Le Naire ; Sarah Le Quéré ; Sophie Le Thiec ; Benoit Lebaudy ; Audrey Lebel ; Camille Lebon ; Lydie Lecarpentier ; Yvon Lechevestrier ; Margot Leclercq ; B. Leclerre ; Noémi Ledoux ; Quintin Leeds ; Pascale Lefebvre ; Sarah Lefevre ; Cathy Lefevre ; Anny Legoff ; Christine Leiritz ; Julie Leitao ; Éric Lemasson ; Chantal Lepage ; Christophe Leroux ; Florent Leroy ; Clémence Lesacq ; Pauline Liénard ; Lola Lilensten ; Jean Lilensten ; Armelle Loiseau ; Corinne Longchamp ; Marion Lopez ; Marie-Pierre Loubet ; Benjamin Loyseau ; Aurélie Luneau ; P.-E. Luneau-Daurignac ; Pauline Machard ; Margaux Magnan ; Odile Magnin ; Pauline Mahé ; Isabelle Maillet ; Jean-Claude Mairal ; Danielle Majani ; Salima Malik ; Alexis Mangenot ; Céline Manson ; Cyril Marcilhacy ; Diane Maretheu ; Elsa Marnette ; Sophie Marron ; Lily Martens ; Catalina Martin-Chico ; Claire Martin-Delozanne ; Hervé Marullaz ; Amélie Masciotta ; Jérôme Mascotto ; Clotilde Masnière ; Maxime Massa ; Jean-Louis

THANKS TO OUR CONTRIBUTORSGeorges Abi-Heila ; Léopold Adam ; Sylvain Aguer ; Cécile Aidan ; Constance Allard ; Clémence Allezard ; Céline Alvarez ; Pauline Amoudry ; Christine Anceau ; Guillaume Ancel ; Catherine André ; Dominique Angelvy ; Deguy Anne ; Morgan Arokion ; Jean-Raymond Attali ; Camille Aubron ; Louise Audibert ; Noémie Audren ; Maïté Aujoulat ; Sylvaine Aveline ; Taos Babour ; Eugénie Baccat ; Clémence Bacher ; Neal Badache ; Fabrice Badin ; Hilde Baele ; Laurence Baës ; Marie Baget ; Bruno M.J. Bailly ; Marie Baird-Smith ; Olivier Balez ; Anne Barbarit ; Céline Bardet ; Eugénie Bardet ; Anais Bardin ; Adrien Bardin ; Florian Bardou ; Genaro Bardy ; Mireille Baros-Gérard ; Zoe Barry ; Nicolas Bataille ; Béatrice Baudo ; Delphine Bauer ; Thomas Baugé ; Sabine Baumgartner ; Yves et Mijo Beccaria ; Dominique Beccaria ; Ondine Beccaria ; Frédéric Beccaria ; Laurent Beccaria ; Alba Beccaria ; Antoine Bégué ; Jean-François Bégué ; Amandine Belle ; Sara Ben Chérifa ; Florent Bénard ; Constance Bénard ; Inès Bennani ; Emmanuelle Bennery ; Amélie Benoist ; Béatrice Berge ; Jean-Marc Bergerot ; Maude Bernardet ; Marianne Bernede ; Mathilde Bernier ; Loick Berrou ; Katia Berry ; Michel Berthaut ; Jessica Berthereau ; Charlotte Berthet-Riviere ; Pascale Berthet-Riviere ; Sophie Bertrand ; Agnès Besnard ; Guillaume Besset ; Christelle Bezzaouya ; Anne Billant-Barthélémy ; David Billaud ; Cécile Billotte Widmann ; Anne Binet ; François-Marie Bironneau ; Ludovic Blachez ; Marion Blais ; Virginie Blanc ; Stéphane Blanc ; Élise Blanc ; Henri Blanc ; Virginie Blanc ; Guillaume Blanchard ; Amélia Blanchot ; Sophie Blondel ; Suzy Blondin ; Anne Boher ; Julie Boiveau ; Nicolas Bole ; Delphine Bondran ; Colette Bonne ; Luc Bonnemaison ; François Bonnerot ; Nadege Bonnet ; Anaëlle Borey ; Charlotte Borch-Jacobsen ; Philippe Bosman ; Pierre Bottura ; Fanny Bouabid ; Marc Bouchage ; Yamina Boulaud ; Magali Bouley ; Florence Bourel ; Jean-Baptiste Bourrat ; Mathilde Boussion ; Chantal et Serge Boussion ; Nicolas Bouvier ; Hadrien Bouvier ; Camille Bouvier ; Mireille et Jean-Marc Bouzanquet ; Alice Boyer ; Benjamin Brasseur ; Sophie Brandstrom ; Breffni Breffni O’Dubhghaill ; Philippe Brenot ; Mathilde Bretillot ; Camille Breynaert ; Marie-Hélène Bridet ; Edwige Briere ; Cécile Broquere ; Thibaut Brugat-Dreux ; Alice Bryon ; Richard Burette ; Audrey Bussière ; Michel Butel ; Marie Cadoz ; Michèle Cail Coms ; Christophe Calissoni ; Cécile Camaret ; Émilie Campagnie ; Sandra Canal ; Camille Canaple ; Johanna Cappi ; Christian Caradec ; Anna Cardonne ; Marie-Hélène Caroff ; Arthur Carpentier ; Mirabelle Carré ; Marie Caroline Carrere ; Clémence Cartet ; Robert Castéra ; Charline Cauchie ; Cécile Cécile Gréboval ; Annie Chabeau ; Véronique Chabrol ; Séverine Chadelaud ; Camille Chaffanjon ; Pierre Chaffanjon ; Charlotte Chaffanjon ; Sarah Chajari ; Anne-Sophie Chamoy ; Françoise Chantegreil ; Thierry Chapeau ; Maryse Chapron ; Jeanne-Marie Charon ; Christophe Chassaigne ; Ludovic Chaudier ; Benoit Chauveau ; Mireille Chéron ; Quentin Chevalier ; Clément Chomeau ; François Cibot ; Les Cinq Pièces ; Julie Cloris ; le Club de la Presse de Lyon ; Cléo Cohen ; Gaelle Combe ; Laure Cometti ; Marion Condominas ; Albert Cons ; Anna Conzatti ; Emeline Coquet ; Perrine Cordier ; Christine Cordonnier ; Fabienne Corona ; Laurence Corona ; Lionel Costa ; Christophe Cotteret ; Béatrice Covet ; Marie-Élise Cutzach ; Christophe D’Aloisio ; Élodie Daguin ; Serge Da Silva ; Ophélie Daniel ; Emmanuelle Danton Biville ; Guillaume Darbonne ; Aurélie Darbouret ; Alain Darnaud ; Camille Darnaud ; Élisabeth Dartiguenave ; Quentin Dary ; Damien Dauge ; Gilles Davidas ; Carole Davy Favret ; Philippe de Bailliencourt ; Xavier de Béthune ; Maud de Bourqueney ; Mado de La Quintinie ; Louis de Luca ; Hugues de Meulemeester ; Sidonie De Roeck-Mangin ; Natacha de Santignac ; Dominique de Souza Pinto ; Jeremy Debreu ; Sylvie Debrun ; Morgane Dechiron ; Vincent Defait ; Julie Deffontaines ; Brigitte Deflandre ; Anne Delarue ; Jérôme Delay ; Solene Delorme ; Emma Delouvrié ; Laura Delprat ; Nathalia Denninger ; Clotilde Derambure ; Dominique Derda ; Francois Derminon ; Marine Dérobert ; Marie Desaunay ; Julie Desbiolles ; Fanny Descarréga ; Anna Deschamps ; Stéphane Descombes ; Alix Despoisse ; Francois Destenabes ; Emmanuelle Destremau ; Sarah Deux ; Camille Devillières ; Zaccharie Dhennin ; Camille Didelon ; Leila Djitli ; Antoine Dominique ; Emmanuelle Dorbon ; Cyril Dosnon ; Leslie Doumerc ;

Massardier ; Emmanuel Massart ; Françoise Masson ; Florent Massot ; Dominique Mathiot ; Léna Mauger ; Rémi Mauger ; Julie Maurel ; Estelle Maussion ; Loïc Mazalrey ; Isabelle Mazzaschi ; Lisa Melia ; Nicolas Ménard ; Gianni Meneghello ; Vincent Mesplede ; Esther Meunier ; Sophie Meunier ; Sophie de Meuron ; Catherine Meyer ; Christine Meyer ; Jean-François Mézil ; Vincent Michaud ; Marie-Émilie Michel ; Ahlem Mifdaoui ; Maude Milekovic ; Ondine Millot ; Sandrine Mini ; Dorothée Moisan ; Élodie Mollé ; Daphné Mongibeaux ; Julien Monier ; Claire Montgobert ; Jean-Louis Mor ; Maude Morrison ; Juliette Mothe ; Adèle Mottet ; Agnès Moulinier Victorieux ; Brigitte Mounier ; Éric Mourguiart ; Paul Muller ; Laurent Muller ; Émilien Muntrez ; Xavier Muntz ; Anna Mycek ; Florence Naze ; Katia Negre ; Malaret Nelly ; Mai Nguyen ; Marie-Noëlle Nicodème ; Jean Noailhat ; Anne-Sophie Novel ; Lydie Obolensky ; Vanessa Occhionero ; Gao Odier ; Géraldine Ohana ; Gaelle Orefici ; Remy Ourdan ; Luc Pagnoux ; Marie-Françoise Paillard ; Christine Pailleux ; Augusto Paim ; Caroline Pain ; Sylvie Pajot ; Guillaume Pajot ; Mathieu Palain ; Juliette Palain ; Mireille Paolini ; Michèle Paquereau ; Rachel Parent ; Élise Pelchat ; Frédéric Pèle ; Sandrine Pelletier ; Laurence Pelletier ; Claire Pellissa ; Mélanie Perceval ; Coline Perennez ; Pascaline Peretti ; Marie-Christine Perrignon ; Judith Perrignon ; Karoll Petit ; Jade Petit ; Vonnick Peton ; Francine Peyrou ; Francoise Pham ; Géraldine Piallat ; Colette Picard ; Laurent-Philippe Picard ; Maud Picart ; Ariane Picoche ; Ludovic Piedtenu ; Frédéric Pierson ; Mathilde Pierson ; Mathilde Pigeon ; Lluis Pino ; Mike Pinto ; Claire Pisarra ; Daniel Pistre ; Pierre Pistre ; Éloïse Plantrou ; Cecile Plunet ; Lou Poisson ; Fanny Pommeret ; Muriel Pomponne ; Fabrice Poncet ; Jean-Jacques Pons ; Géraldine Ponsolle ; Ingrid Ponsy ; Margo Porteous-Coté ; Catherine Portevin ; Jean-Luc Potart ; Jordan Pouille ; Brigitte Poupard ; Claudine Pouvereau ; Véronique Prentice ; Marc Pussemier ; Emmanuelle Pys ; Sophie Quesnel ; Françoise et Jean-Pierre Quillard ; Marion Quillard ; Marie-Thérèse Quillard ; Karine Rabian ; Cécile Rabot ; June Raclet ; Maud Raffray ; Margaux Raggi ; Michel Raigne ; Annie Raigne ; Tess Raimbeau ; Catherine Ramaut ; Guillem Ramírez Chico ; Jean-Claude Raspiengeas ; Bérénice Ravache ; Philippe Raynal ; Bernard Regairaz ; Christian Remael ; Mathilde Rémignon ; Solenn Renault ; Éléonore Resongles ; Miriam Reumann ; Philippe Rey ; Aline Rey ; Monique Rey ; Pénélope et Romain Riboud-Graziani ; Maïa Ricadat ; Marie-Claire Richard-Multeau ; Dominik Richard-Multeau ; Pauline Riffaut ; Angélique Rigault ; Laure Rigoudy ; Denis Robert ; Juliette Robert ; Pascale Robert-Diard ; Juliette Rochet ; Cédric Roger-Vasselin ; Sophie Romanotto ; Cécile Rongier ; Sébastien Rossano ; Miguel Rotenberg ; Sabrina Rouillé ; Étienne Rouillon ; Stéphane Rouquet ; Stefania Rousselle ; Svetlana Rouveure ; Nicolas Rudaz ; Hélène Ruffenach ; Pascal Ruffenach ; Jean-Jacques Ruiz ; Catherine Ruiz ; Véronique Rumolino ; Claudio Rumolino ; Simone Ryf ; Christian Ryo ; Benjamin Sabbah ; Laure Sagot ; Louise de Saint-Exupéry ; Marin de Saint-Exupéry ; Jeanne Sallaberry ; Fréderic Sallet ; Agathe Sands ; Maude Sapin ; Geneviève Sartre ; Myriam Sauvage ; Lou Sauvajon ; Maxellende Scalbert ; Marion Scherrer ; Céline Schmitt ; Mathilde Schneider ; Christian Scoffier ; Christine Scoffier ; Victoria Scoffier ; Vincent Sebire ; Aure Séguier ; Marie-Hélène Senez ; Jean-Paul Senez ; Jérôme Sentilhes ; Noémie Sergent ; Pierre Serizay ; Lydie Siliec ; François Simon ; Fanch Simonet ; Audrey Siourd ; Ophélie Siwek ; Christelle Soisnard ; Mélanie Soufflet ; Françoise Souliman ; La Soupe de l’Espace ; Maïa Souviron ; Claire Stefani ; Françoise Stehelin ; Gérard Stehelin ; Patrick Stex ; Katy Stone ; Aleth Stroebel ; Gautier Subtil ; Marie-Hélène Subtil ; Marie-Pierre Subtil ; Laurent Subtil ; Nathalie Subtil-Chedru ; Xavier Subtil ; Cerise Sudry-Le Dû ; Jeremy Suyker ; Marie Suyker ; Dahina Sy ; Isabelle Talès ; Ilhame Taoufiqi ; Sophie Tardy-Joubert ; Esra Tat ; Adrien Taudiere ; Stephanie Tchiombiano ; Mehdi Teffahi ; Jean Terrier ; Virginie Terroitin ; Jeanne Thibaudeau ; Margaux Thierrée ; Claudie Thomas-Simon ; Lenaïg Thoraval ; Sylvain Thuault ; Cecil Thuillier ; Juliette Tissot ; Pauline Tissot ; Quentin Toffolini ; Sandrine Tolotti ; Marie-France Tome ; Jean-Loup Traoré ; Ariane Tricaud ; Marc Trombe ; Sandra Troupenat ; Aurélie Trybus ; Marion Vaisse ; Benoît Vaïsse ; Roberta Valerio ; Marine Valignat ; Pierre de Vallombreuse ; Julia Vandal ; Jean Vandenhove ; Luc Vanhuffel ; Mathilde Vanmansart ; Corinne Vanmerris ; Pierre Vedel ; Jacques Verwaerde ; Sarah Vieux ; Thierry Vigreux ; Anne Vilacèque ; Bernard Vivien ; Émilie Weynants ; Florence Willaert ; Fabrice Wittner ; Diane Wulwek ; Laurie Ysmal ; Laurence Zarra ; Jean-Claude Zaugg et bien d’autres encore…