Does Paris have a distinctive spirit of protest and revolution? Is BHL's vision of Paris as literary as it is political?
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?
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.
From storm systems in Florida to those in Washington, D.C. Continuation of Bernard-Henri Lévy's road trip through the United States.
What would Tocqueville say? A journey continues, from Seattle to San Diego via Alcatraz and an obesity clinic.
What is the internet if not a modern panopticon? But it is a two-sided one, a panopticon that can be turned around.
On recent trip to Israel, French-Jewish intellectual promoted his new book on Judaism and explained what it’s like to be a modern-day Jonah.
From the Balkans to IS in Kurdistan, French thinker/filmmaker Bernard-Henri Levy’s films document the harsh reality of combat front lines. Now showing in NYC and LA through Jan. 18
France's great thinker on why, despite terrorist atrocities and rising levels of hate, he remains defiantly positive.
“War, Evil and the End of History”, was published in English. Levy traveled to five of the world’s unheralded hot spots: Sri Lanka, Burundi, Colombia, Sudan and Angola. His first-person accounts of “forgotten wars” are chilling.
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