What is the internet if not a modern panopticon? But it is a two-sided one, a panopticon that can be turned around.
France's leading intellectual, Bernard-Henri Lévy thinks the world has got it wrong on coronavirus.
Vladimir Putin denounces Western colonialism while bringing back its most atrocious practices.
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.
Full text of a speech delivered before the Academic College of Netanya, June 18, 2018, upon receiving an Honoris Causa doctorate.
Like Orpheus, Lanzmann was an untamed poet for whom the verses were steel rails, birch forests, silences, names.
The ‘Deep State’ exists—Trump and his ilk have run into it.
Caroline Fourest’s ‘Sisters in Arms’ arrives just in time for the Ottoman Anschluss against Syrian Kurdistan.
Why the filmmaker’s depiction of early-20th-century anti-Semitism in ‘J’accuse’ is, with reservations, ‘important and beautiful’.
Bernard-Henri Lévy remembers his friend and mentor, the activist and journalist of the ‘Nouvel Observateur’ and doyen of the French left.
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