The 37th Cap'Com Forum takes place from November 18 to 20 in Angers.
3 days, 1,000 communicators, 150 speakers come together to discuss public communication practices, compare them with the analyses of experts and academics, and discover a territory of communication.
The Cap'Com Forum stops off in Angers, a region that has written and illustrated a shared history right up to today's socio-environmental changes. Its tapestry of the Apocalypse, a monumental work of popularization through images, fleshes out this territory and still resonates today. Here, contemporary artist Jean Lurçat picked up the thread of a story about the rebirth of humanity, as if the act of recounting enabled us to reweave the bond.
Humanism and storytelling, Angers shows us the way. This year's event is an opportunity to put storytelling back at the heart of public communication, to address the tensions surrounding transitions, generational issues and post-crisis dialogue. For weaving links means interweaving the threads of individual destinies within a historical framework. Are public communicators weavers or do they have to embroider a little? We'll be debating, learning and shedding light on all aspects of a profession that is also changing. This will be a time to work on our stories, without telling ourselves stories!
3 days, 1,000 communicators, 150 speakers come together to discuss public communication practices, compare them with the analyses of experts and academics, and discover a territory of communication.
The Cap'Com Forum stops off in Angers, a region that has written and illustrated a shared history right up to today's socio-environmental changes. Its tapestry of the Apocalypse, a monumental work of popularization through images, fleshes out this territory and still resonates today. Here, contemporary artist Jean Lurçat picked up the thread of a story about the rebirth of humanity, as if the act of recounting enabled us to reweave the bond.
Humanism and storytelling, Angers shows us the way. This year's event is an opportunity to put storytelling back at the heart of public communication, to address the tensions surrounding transitions, generational issues and post-crisis dialogue. For weaving links means interweaving the threads of individual destinies within a historical framework. Are public communicators weavers or do they have to embroider a little? We'll be debating, learning and shedding light on all aspects of a profession that is also changing. This will be a time to work on our stories, without telling ourselves stories!