Bernard-Henri Lévy discusses his new book, "The Will to See: Dispatches from a World of Misery and Hope" live in-person at Glazer Campus
Over the past fifty years, renowned intellectual BHL has reported extensively on human rights abuses around the world. This book follows the Lévy into eight international hotspots—in Nigeria; Syrian and Iraqi Kurdistan; Ukraine; Somalia; Bangladesh; Lesbos; Libya; and Afghanistan—that have escaped global attention or active response.
BHL is sent by a group of newspapers to bear witness and report from places in the world where suffering and misery is at its peak, where the world’s destiny is being determined an no one, it seems, is paying attention. An unflinching look at the most urgent humanitarian crises aroud the globe.
Bernard-Henri Lévy's documentary “The Will to See” plunges the viewer into his frenetic globe-hopping to the places the world would prefer to forget.
International observers, both America’s friends and adversaries, discuss the rise of anger, unrest and polarization in the United States –...
I have come to ask Lévy about the future of the West — if, that is, he feels there will be one
As we find out in his new book, “The Will to See: Dispatches From a World of Misery and Hope”, Lévy has put himself in harm’s way in the dangerous and troubled places that he writes about, including Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Ukraine.
Over the course of four decades Lévy has made a name for himself traversing the globe in an effort to turn the world’s attention to forgotten conflicts, humanitarian crises. He continues with “The Will to See”
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.
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