Loading edition detail...
Preparing this view.
François Bondy
"Francis Bondy's essays themselves represent a broad sweep of major figures and events in the second half of the twentieth century. His spatial outreach went from Budapest to Tokyo and Paris. His political essays extended from George Kennan to Benito Mussolini. And his prime metier, the cultural figures of Europe, covered Sartre, Kafka, Heidegger, and Milosz. The analysis was uniformly fair minded but unstinting in its insights. Taken together, the variegated themes he raised in his work as a Zurich journalist, a Paris editor, and a European homme de lettres sketch guidelines for an entrancing portrait of the intellectual as cosmopolitan." "European Notebooks contains most of the articles that Bondy wrote for Encounter under the stewardship of Stephen Spender and Irving Kristol, and then for the thirty years that Melvin Lasky served as editor. Bondy was that rare unattached intellectual, "free of every totalitarian temptation" and, as Lasky notes, unfailing in his devotion to the liberties and civilities of a humane social order. European Notebooks offers a window into a civilization that came to maturity during the period in which these essays were written."--Jacket.
| Publisher | Transaction Publishers, Routledge |
|---|---|
| Pages | 364 |
| Search language | english |
| ISBN_10 | 0-765-80271-6 primary |
Publication-specific alternatives linked to the same work.