French writer Bernard-Henri Lévy and Fareed take a look at how the pandemic has reshaped not just geopolitics, but also...
Bernard-Henri Lévy's “Israel Alone” is an important book: the philosopher understood the October 7th event.
BHL offers fresh insights on the experience we have been living all over the world, its political, mediatic, philosophical, human implications – with and beyond COVID-19 itself.
As a philosopher, what is BHL's idea of war? Is war fundamentally human? Is man, in the end, a wolf who hunts man? Or is there still hope of eradicating war?
The French thinker’s latest book offers a global vision in which national pride and universal ideals can powerfully coexist.
By taking an American journalist hostage, Putin’s Russia announces its transformation into a full-blown terrorist state.
As documentaries go, few arrive with as much ripped-from-the-headlines urgency as “The Will to See,” an eye-opening return visit to the backdrops of some of the world’s worst atrocities.
Over the course of four decades Lévy has made a name for himself traversing the globe in an effort to turn the world’s attention to forgotten conflicts, humanitarian crises. He continues with “The Will to See”
Have we been so anesthetized by containment that we ignore the death of a doctor on the front lines, in violation of the laws of war?
Festival director Aviva Weintraub says even Omicron won't keep the show from going on January 12-25; audiences will be on the edge of their seats - at Lincoln Center or at home.
Official social networks