The radical party in the memory of the twentieth century is synonymous with everything that is most mediocre, most corrupt, most hostile to greatness in French politics.
About Vincent Darré, the prince of youth (Barrès or Cocteau or the memory of Raymond Radiguet) with his air of the enfant terrible.
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.
The French thinker’s latest book offers a global vision in which national pride and universal ideals can powerfully coexist.
We can think what we want about the president's record, his project, his person, but the Macron vote must be, today, unconditional.
This book is a set of opinionated conversations between Françoise Giroud, former government minister, feminist journalist, and Bernard-Henri Lévy, philosopher, on male-female relations serves up a very intellectual discourse on love, sex, jealousy, seduction and infidelity.
In “The Will to See,” France’s great proponent of humanitarian interventionism chronicles the world’s forgotten wars.
I have come to ask Lévy about the future of the West — if, that is, he feels there will be one
Already, the candidate’s violations of French Jewish moral values are perilous and obscene.
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