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Conversations
with Jean-Paul Sartre
Jean-Paul Sartre Edited by Perry Anderson,
Quintin Hoare and Ronald Fraser
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Jean-Paul
Sartre was undoubtedly one of the greatest and most
popular philosophers of the 20th Century. Also a prominent
novelist, playwright and biographer, Sartre was, above
all, the embodiment of the engag intellectual, active
in a variety of political causes, as well as an individual
who attempted to live his life in accordance with
the philosophy he professed. It was this that gave
his lifelong preoccupation with freedom, choice and
what he came to refer to as social conditioning, its
cutting edge. Sartre's life was in many ways an illustration
of his brand of existentialism in action. In these
two interviews, the Marxist historian and scholar
Perry Anderson takes Sartre on a wide-ranging tour
of his philosophy and politics. The skilful and part
chronological interrogation of various fundamental
Satrean concepts, and the detailed and complex elucidations
of them by the philosopher, make these interviews
a must for anyone interested in Sartre's philosophical,
political and ethical development. The wide range
of topics discussed also includes 'freedom of choice',
his uneasy relationship with Freudian concepts, his
debates with Marx, and his acute observations on drama,
the Cultural Revolution, Stalinism, the May 'Events'
and of course, the US war on Vietnam. Their breadth
remains a testimony to one man's attempt to make philosophical
sense of the tumultuous world around him.
Conversations
with Edward Said
Edward Said Edited by Tariq Ali
In
his last years, looking back over questions of life,
history, exile, identity and Palestine, Edward Said
brings his considerable intellect and deep personal
engagement to bear on some of the most troubling and
volatile issues of our time. In these conversations
with Tariq Ali, Said ranges back over his own dislocated
existence, his initiation into politics, his involvement
with the Palestine cause, his approach to the study
of culture and his pervasive love of literature and
music. Intimate, personal, thought-provoking and absorbing,
these conversations capture Said - as political activist,
cultural historian, professor of literature and music
aficionado - and confirm his position as one of the
most passionate and thoughtful intellectuals of our
times.
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