Bernard-Henri Lévy has relentlessly devoted his life to travel the globe in order to witness the forgotten wars and victims.
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.
“Left in Dark Times" is an apologia based on ideals and experience and then on a series of critiques of the left’s shortcomings, followed by concrete suggestions for their remedy.
Levy is famous for his activism. The astonishing story of him marching across bombed Libyan cities has many especially fascinated and infuriated.
"Arab Winter" is a stupid slogan and the West needs to get over its China fixation, says France's most prominent intellectual.
A close reading of the philosophical career, and influence, of France’s most ridiculed public intellectual.
A new documentary, "Why Ukraine" directed by Bernard-Henri Lévy, shows why Russia is losing the war.
The continent faces its biggest challenge since the 1930s. We urge European patriots to resist the nationalist onslaught.
In “The Will to See,” France’s great proponent of humanitarian interventionism chronicles the world’s forgotten wars.
Bernard-Henri Lévy is a French philosopher, filmmaker, activist and the author of over 30 books. Lévy’s work as an intellectual...
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