Results for “Victor Hugo

City of revolution

Bernard-Henri Lévy (interview), Purple, May 22, 2020

Does Paris have a distinctive spirit of protest and revolution? Is BHL's vision of Paris as literary as it is political?

Ukraine’s Hero President Z.

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Tablet, February 28, 2022

The funnyman who became a warrior and founded a new Europe.

Bernard-Henri Lévy and the Heroes of Ukraine

Cathy Young, The Bulwark, November 02, 2022

The French intellectual’s new film, "Why Ukraine", puts the war in the context of Western history.

Bono, Azov, and May 8

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Will to See by Bernard-Henri Lévy (Substack), May 11, 2022

Bono sings in Kiev. The Azov battalion calls for help. When Putin parades and continues his denazification carnage outside his walls.

Macron, Le Pen, and the House of Usher

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Will to See by Bernard-Henri Lévy (Substack), April 22, 2022

We can think what we want about the president's record, his project, his person, but the Macron vote must be, today, unconditional.

The last great free voice of Russia: Novaya Gazeta

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Will to See by Bernard-Henri Lévy (Substack), March 29, 2022

Bernard-Henri Lévy, director of "La Règle du Jeu", offers to host the suspended Russian daily.

Putin’s only strength lies in the west’s weakness

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Daily Beast, March 04, 2014

This is the second time that Bernard-Henri Lévy has spoken in the Maidan. On February 9, before the massacre, speaking at the invitation of the Council of Maidan, he extolled the restraint shown by the protesters.

What Bernard-Henri Lévy sees for the West

David Patrikarakos, The Spectator, November 18, 2021

I have come to ask Lévy about the future of the West — if, that is, he feels there will be one

Road Trip: Part II

Bernard-Henri Lévy, The Atlantic, June 01, 2005

What would Tocqueville say? A journey continues, from Seattle to San Diego via Alcatraz and an obesity clinic.

Farewell to Claude Lanzmann

Bernard-Henri Lévy, Tablet, July 12, 2018

Like Orpheus, Lanzmann was an untamed poet for whom the verses were steel rails, birch forests, silences, names.