A string of startling victories has opened new pathways to freedom in the Middle East.
A twenty-first-century pilgrim ends a year-long journey where the seventeenth-century Pilgrims ended theirs—on the coast of New England, not far from where his travels began.
Bernard-Henri Lévy draws from the well of late-18th-century French philosopher Chateaubriand for a broad defense of the aesthetics and morals of liberalism.
Bernard-Henri Lévy remembers his friend and mentor, the activist and journalist of the ‘Nouvel Observateur’ and doyen of the French left.
Turkey’s authoritarian president poses an active danger to Western interests. He must be contained.
We can think what we want about the president's record, his project, his person, but the Macron vote must be, today, unconditional.
How does America look to foreign eyes? This year marks the bicentennial of the birth of Alexis de Tocqueville, our keenest interpreter. We asked another Frenchman to travel deep into America and report on what he found.
The morally minded French public intellectual applies 21st-century chutzpah to our radical age.
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