Bernard-Henri Lévy remembers watching Trump’s inauguration with Philip Roth.
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.
Full text of a speech delivered before the Academic College of Netanya, June 18, 2018, upon receiving an Honoris Causa doctorate.
Why the United States’ inexplicable abandonment of the Kurdish people is ‘the geopolitical equivalent of a stock-market crash’.
Q&A with Bernard-Henri Lévy about The Will to see.
In “The Will to See,” France’s great proponent of humanitarian interventionism chronicles the world’s forgotten wars.
Already, the candidate’s violations of French Jewish moral values are perilous and obscene.
What would Tocqueville say? A journey continues, from Seattle to San Diego via Alcatraz and an obesity clinic.
Like Orpheus, Lanzmann was an untamed poet for whom the verses were steel rails, birch forests, silences, names.
Why the filmmaker’s depiction of early-20th-century anti-Semitism in ‘J’accuse’ is, with reservations, ‘important and beautiful’.
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