‘When I see the determination of these brave Jewish students standing tall, I feel hope’, says Bernard-Henri Lévy.
Does Paris have a distinctive spirit of protest and revolution? Is BHL's vision of Paris as literary as it is political?
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.
From the Pilgrim founders to Donald Trump, ‘a belief in the exceptional role of an American nation’.
A close reading of the philosophical career, and influence, of France’s most ridiculed public intellectual.
French showman-philosopher begs London audience to save the European project.
The smart set turned up at the world body for the latest from the self-appointed diplomat with no title but a penchant for the headlines and the frontlines.
The attack was an outrage not only against a great and brave author but against truth and beauty themselves. It must have a ringing response.
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