Wednesday 25 March, 18:30

Spoken Worlds: Reading by Adèle Yon

Adèle Yon, author of Mon vrai nom est Elisabeth (2025) and a researcher in film studies, began writing during her PhD within the SACRe research-creation laboratory. Born in 1994 in Paris, she investigates, writes and cooks.

Her reading and conversation with Emmanuelle Pireyre examine the book’s hybrid forms—autobiographical narrative, road trip and essay—while investigating a family lobotomy in 1950. Yon explores archives, testimony and memory to address heredity, violence against women, twentieth-century psychiatric practices and the secrets of a bourgeois family, revealing personal and historical entanglements.

In French.

Blvd James-Fazy 15,
1201 Geneva
{"title":"Spoken Worlds: Reading by Ad\u00e8le Yon","description":"\u003Cp\u003EAd\u00e8le Yon, author of Mon vrai nom est Elisabeth (2025) and a researcher in film studies, began writing during her PhD within the SACRe research-creation laboratory. Born in 1994 in Paris, she investigates, writes and cooks.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EHer reading and conversation with Emmanuelle Pireyre examine the book's hybrid forms\u2014autobiographical narrative, road trip and essay\u2014while investigating a family lobotomy in 1950. Yon explores archives, testimony and memory to address heredity, violence against women, twentieth-century psychiatric practices and the secrets of a bourgeois family, revealing personal and historical entanglements.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cstrong\u003EIn French.\u003C\/strong\u003E\u003C\/p\u003E","start_date":"2026-03-25","end_date":"2026-03-25","date":"Wednesday 25 March, 18:30","timings":[{"timing_start_date":"20260325T183000Z","timing_end_date":"20260325T193000Z"}]}
Photo Credit: Adèle Yon © Charlotte Krebs Julliard

You might also like

28 January – 23 December

This workshop explores the traditional process of assembling a herbarium specimen, inspired by Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s collections. Participants learn scientific techniques for pressing and mounting dried plants on old paper, practice botanical labelling and nomenclature, and select specimens to create a personal herbarium sheet. The session examines preservation methods, identification principles and the historical context of Rousseau’s approach, combining practical skills with scientific insight to produce a lasting botanical object.

In French.

19 – 29 March

Echo is a transdisciplinary festival devised by Compagnie sturmfrei that reimagines Ovid’s Metamorphoses through 250 shifting myths. Artists, poets, philosophers and participants inhabit an experimental, two‑level environment transformed into evolving ECHO‑scenographies. The programme assembles performances, participatory formats and workshops that blur genres and invite improvisation, collective dramaturgy and sensory encounters. The work foregrounds mythic transformation, live experimentation and porous collaboration across disciplines.

In French.

Wednesday 25 March, 18:00

Sylvia Ekström, associate professor in the Department of Astronomy at UNIGE, studies stellar processes and their role in the cosmic chemical cycle.

The lecture examines stellar life cycles and the relentless interplay between gravity and nuclear reactions, exploring how stars forge heavy elements in their cores and return them to the interstellar medium. Ekström explains pathways by which these atoms become incorporated into planets and contribute to the conditions for life.

In French.

Wednesday 25 March, 19:00

This session examines the links between diet and health, exploring nutritional, social and systemic factors that shape wellbeing. It investigates how food environments, access inequalities and cultural practices influence chronic disease risk and prevention. The discussion considers evidence-based approaches, public health implications and community-level interventions to promote healthier food systems and support individual dietary choices. Participants gain frameworks to critically analyse connections between nutrition, policy and health outcomes.

In French.

28 January – 23 December

This interactive memory challenge invites participants to test their memory while exploring practical ways to preserve biodiversity based on Geneva’s municipal strategy. Players match “before-and-after” images that illustrate individual and institutional actions, and each correct pair reveals concise information explaining the measure. The activity examines themes such as habitat restoration, species-friendly practices, urban greening and policy responses, helping participants understand the impact and rationale behind everyday and organisational conservation choices.

Wednesday 25 March, 17:15

Martine Ostorero and Cyril Dépraz lead a commented listening of excerpts from the RTS podcast In the Terrible Time of the Witches (9 episodes, 2022), guiding reflections on the series’ research and narrative approach.

The session examines why witch-hunting was particularly fierce in Switzerland for over two centuries, investigating how judicial systems produced enemies, the mechanisms of accusation and persecution, and the human toll. It discusses broader themes of legal culture, collective violence and historical memory.

In French.

Oops! It seems there
are no events matching your selection!

Please adjust your criteria to see more results.

Add to Calendar

Select the date to be saved in your Google calendar.

calendar placeholder

Done!

Event removed from your CoolAgenda.

Yeah!

Event Saved to your CoolAgenda

Add to CoolAgenda

In your CoolAgenda

Reset password

Password was reset

Your password has been reset successfully. You can now log in with your new password.

Check your Inbox

We’ve sent you a password reset email to the address provided. Please check your inbox and/or spam folder.

Forgot your password?

Thank you!

Please check your inbox for a verification email to complete your sign-up.

Sign Up

Create your Account and Culture Up!