Why French Intellectual History Should Repeat Itself as Farce
Eric Fassin, 31 October 1996
Adventures on the Freedom Road: The French Intellectuals in the 20th Century
by Bernard-Henri Lévy, translated by Richard Veasey.
Harvill, 434 pp., £20, December 1995,1 86046 035 6 Show More
by Bernard-Henri Lévy, translated by Richard Veasey.
Harvill, 434 pp., £20, December 1995,
The Imaginary Jew
by Alain Finkielkraut, translated by Kevin O’Neill and David Suchoff.
Nebraska, 230 pp., £23.95, August 1994,0 8032 1987 3 Show More
by Alain Finkielkraut, translated by Kevin O’Neill and David Suchoff.
Nebraska, 230 pp., £23.95, August 1994,
The Defeat of the Mind
by Alain Finkielkraut, translated by Judith Friedlander.
Columbia, 165 pp., $15, May 1996,0 231 08023 9 Show More
by Alain Finkielkraut, translated by Judith Friedlander.
Columbia, 165 pp., $15, May 1996,
“... tradition. In fact, his defence of the French mind, originally published at the same time as Allan Bloom’s Closing of the American Mind, is a plea for Culture, not Reason – explicitly, it defines literature in opposition to science, and implicitly, the intellectual in opposition to the academic. Lévy and Finkielkraut’s insistence on the ... ”