Marie-Ève Thérenty (5 June 2025, 09:45-10:45)
Spécialiste de la presse, Marie-Ève Thérenty est professeure de littérature française à l’université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3 et membre senior de l’Institut universitaire de France. Elle est l’autrice de Mosaïques. Être écrivain entre presse et roman (2003), La Littérature au quotidien, poétiques journalistiques au XIXe siècle (2007) et Femmes de presse, femmes de lettres (2019). Dans ce dernier livre, Marie-Ève Thérenty nous présente un panorama des femmes journalistes, du XIXe siècle et de l’entrée dans l’ère médiatique à 1944

Will Mari (6 June 2025, 09:30-10:30)
Will Mari is associate professor of media history and media law at the Manship School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University. He is the author of a book on the history of the computer in the American newsroom from 1960 through 1990, A Short History of Disruptive Journalism Technologies, and a book covering the social-cultural history of the American newsroom during the interwar years and early Cold War, The American Newsroom: A History, 1920-1960. His third book, Newsrooms and the Disruption of the Internet: A Short History of Disruptive Technologies, 1990–2010, came out in 2022.

Noah Amir Arjomand (7 June 2025, 09:30-10:30)
Noah Amir Arjomand studied sociology (PhD) at Columbia University. He is currently enrolled in the MFA Writing for the Performing Arts program at the University of California's Riverside campus. Cambridge University Press published his first book, Fixing Stories: Local Newsmaking and International Media in Turkey and Syria, in 2022. Fixing Stories is an ethnography of the roles and strategies of “fixers” who broker communication between foreign journalists and sources. He shows how fixers shape the news and manage their powerful but precarious position between cultural and political worlds.
