Le théorème de Marguerite (Anne Navion, 2024)
Cinema and Science Series
- Invited Scientists
-
Amaia Arregi Buldain
DIPC, Emakumeak Zientzian - When
-
2025/02/17
20:00 - Place
- Cinema Le Select, Saint Jean de Luz
- Organizers
- DIPC, Basque Film Archive, San Sebastian International Film Festival
- Add to calendar
- iCal
The eighth edition of the Cinema and Science Cycle, organized by the DIPC, the Basque Film Archive and the San Sebastian Film Festival, will be held in 2025. Within the program, as every year, we will celebrate the International Day of Girls and Women in Science in collaboration with the Emakumeak Zientzian initiative.
This year, the film Le théorème de Marguerite (Anne Navion, 2024) will be screened. Marguerite is a brilliant maths student at the prestigious Ecole Supérieure de Lyon. Everything seems to be going smoothly as she gets ready to present her thesis, but on the key day, one small mistake brings her to the brink of the abyss.
First Amaia Arregi Buldain will give a brief presentation and after the screening there will be a question and answer session.
(Version: French, Presentation: French)
About the speaker
Her specialty is scientific communication and the development of STEAM dissemination projects aimed at the general public and education. She has been the general coordinator of the last two editions of Passion for Knowledge science festival (2023, 2019) and she has co-created scientific culture projects such as nanoKOMIK or the Cinema and Science cycle. She coordinates Zientziakutxa cycle of conferences and She is a member of the organizing committee of Emakumeak Zientzian alliance that brings together 32 science institutions of the Basque Country. She is member of the jury of the Euskadi STEAM Prize since 2021. She frequently collaborates in the radio as a science disseminator (Euskadi Irratia, Onda Vasca) Previously, she completed her doctorate in materials science and hydrogen technologies in the University of Trento, after studying physics at the UPV/EHU. She has done research and collaborative stays at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (California) and the Institute of Structural Biology and Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble, France).