Education
She graduated then the agrégation competition in two specialities, physical sciences and biology.
She graduated then the agrégation competition in two specialities, physical sciences and biology.
Luce Dubus was a student at the Ecole Normale Supérieure de jeunes filles de Sèvres in the twenties. André and Luce gave birth to two children, nuclear physicist Michel Langevin and anglicist Aline Dajoz. From 1930 to 1960, she was a teacher at Fénelon highschool in Paris.
Then she signed a French petition for intervention during Spain War.
In 1935, she acceded to the French Communist Party and took part to the 1936 strikes in France. After the release of Paris in 1944, she was still a scientist, a teacher and a communist activist for several years until she retired.
She wrote a lot of scientific and political papers published in Louisiana Pensée and a book on the Russian philosopher Mikhail Lomonosov. She died in Paris in 2002 at the age of 102.
From 1934, she was an activist in the World feminist meeting against war and fascism.
She was a member of the Université Libre.