• The paper, founded in 1973 by Sartre and some French Maoists, is losing readers and money in equal measure.

    ECONOMIST: Attacking the things that make France French

  • He had little patience with Sartre and other intellectuals who adopted anti-establishment poses while enjoying the perks of fame.

    ECONOMIST: May 1968

  • His stance led to the quarrel with Jean-Paul Sartre and others at Les Temps Modernes, postwar Paris's leading intellectual magazine.

    WSJ: Book Review: Algerian Chronicles

  • His own artistic talents were revealed in the beautiful catalogues he commissioned, with essays by Ernest Hemingway, Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus.

    ECONOMIST: Post-Impressionists

  • She weeps profusely after partings, hugs herself at the memory of his strong embrace and agonises over her sense of duty to Sartre and her work when Algren asks her to marry him.

    ECONOMIST: French muses

  • Yet, at the time of his death, Camus found himself an outcast in Paris, snubbed by Jean-Paul Sartre and other left-bank intellectuals, and denounced for his freethinking refusal to yield to fashionable political views.

    ECONOMIST: In search of the real Camus

  • It's hard to imagine many famous French faces without a haze of cigarette smoke - (unintelligible) Belmondo, Bardot, Sartre and Jeanne Moreau, holding their cigarette - French word by the way - aloft and pursed in your lips to make the tip of the cigarette smolder.

    NPR: A Tradition Ends in French Cafes

  • But the text is informed and witty, the North Korean scenes sketched with what reads like first-hand knowledge, and there is an engaging take on cultural preoccupations from Karl Marx to Jean-Paul Sartre and Bob Dylan, played out against the unlikely skyline of Pyongyang with its empty boulevards and permanently unfinished multi-storey hotels.

    ECONOMIST: The draw of a mysterious nation

  • And when he returned to Paris in 1946, Camus and Sartre had filled the void.

    ECONOMIST: 20th-century art

  • Beauvoir and Sartre helped to popularise a modern ideal of a male-female union of the minds.

    ECONOMIST: French muses

  • It delves sympathetically into Sartre's ideas and makes a strong case for their importance.

    ECONOMIST: Jean-Paul Sartre

  • Sartre was a lonely and fatherless child, raised by a doting mother and a professorial grandfather.

    ECONOMIST: Jean-Paul Sartre

  • By the late 1940s, Sartre gave up teaching and lived off his writing.

    ECONOMIST: Jean-Paul Sartre

  • Sartre never got the urges to belong and to be free into balance.

    ECONOMIST: Jean-Paul Sartre

  • At age 16, Branson launched a youth-culture periodical called Student Magazine, sporting columns and interviews from novelists James Baldwin and Alice Walker and existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre.

    FORBES: Never ask for permission to do something remarkable

  • Jean-Paul Sartre, who was a philospher, dramatist and critic as well as a novelist, was too interested in himself to immortalise Simone de Beauvoir.

    ECONOMIST: French muses

  • That seems a long way from sleeping under a bridge, and I get a sense that the Sartre book is a kind of talisman: a pledge to himself that it will happen.

    BBC: Greece asylum: Journey through a broken system

  • Lispector has been compared to Jean-Paul Sartre, for her sense of life's senselessness, and to Franz Kafka.

    ECONOMIST: Brazilian literature

  • It also led to his falling-out with Sartre, who at the time was still defending the Soviet Union and refusing to condemn the gulags.

    ECONOMIST: In search of the real Camus

  • As a teen I carried Nausea by Sartre everywhere I went, until I actually began to feel nauseated and returned it to the library, unfinished.

    NPR: Our Lives Are Ephemeral

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