la 12e édition des Tribunes de la presse interroge toutes les identités
The opening evening (Wednesday 7 p.m. at the TNBA) sets the scene by questioning what founds identity through the presence of Elie Barnavi, historian and diplomat, and Etienne Klein, philosopher of science. The evening will close with the presentation of the Jean-Lacouture prize by Alain Rousset, president of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region.
Thursday 24
Thursday 24, at the TNBA, in the morning, three authors will explore the evolution of what founds the feeling of French identity (at 10 a.m.) then three specialists in urbanity will discuss what makes up the identity of a city, in particular comparing Bordeaux and Dubai (at 11 a.m.). In the afternoon, identity will be perceived through everyday questions: the lucrative market of DNA tests (at 2 p.m.), how Man has an impact on the Earth on which he depends (3.15 p.m.) or tattooing among young people (4.30 p.m. ). At the Institute of Journalism of Bordeaux (IJBA), we will debate the future of press cartoons and the role of information in the war in Ukraine. At the Station Ausone of the Mollat bookstore, the philosopher Mazarine Pingeot discusses sexual identity.
Friday 25
Friday 25, at the TNBA, the conflict in Ukraine questioned European identity (10am). The environment is treated like a person with this conference on the Place de la Garonne in the city (2 p.m.). There will not be too much of an hour to interpret religious identity within a secular society (3 p.m.). The astrophysicist, Jean-Pierre Bibring will affirm (4 p.m.) that we would be alone in the universe since the Earth is unique in its kind. At 4 p.m., at the IJBA, two journalists explain the solutions journalism that more and more media are adopting. At the Ausone de Mollat station, Aurélie Bambuck, originally from the West Indies, crosses her gaze on the slave trade with a descendant of merchants from Bordeaux to create a comic strip, “Pacotille, the child slave”. At Cap Sciences (5 p.m.), we will analyze how the information war is also waged on social networks.
Saturday 26
Saturday 26, at the TNBA, three speakers specializing in criminology and digital technology will address the issue of facial recognition in terms of security (10 a.m.) then three journalists will try to analyze the consequences on their audience of “colorless” newspapers, without a strong identity at the reverse of what is published on the Internet.
This edition will end with the presentation of the Reporters d’espoirs 2022 prize, which honors a report on a conflict situation in which a population is struggling to resist, survive or rebuild itself.