Simone de beauvoir biography yahoo finance
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How did the intimate lives of major philosophers shape their ideas? Did their closest relationships with families, spouses, life partners and secret lovers influence their philosophies?
These are the questions Warren Ward sets out to answer in his new book, Lovers of Philosophy: How the Intimate Lives of Seven Philosophers Shaped Modern Thought.
A psychiatrist and psychotherapist, Ward brings to his task both expertise and a passionate interest in his subjects. His canvas is continental philosophy from the Enlightenment to the late 20th century. He enters into the lives of this period’s most widely known philosophers: Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Sartre, Foucault and Derrida.
Review: Lovers of Philosophy: How the Intimate Lives of Seven Philosophers Shaped Modern Thought (Okham)
As well as exploring the connection between intimacy and philosophy, this book has another ambition. Ward recalls having been intimidated by the daunting authority of the philosophical greats.
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Christopher Hampton Circling Simone De Beauvoir-Nelson Algren Affair Drama With Anne Fontaine; Talks ‘White Chameleon’ Big-Screen Hopes
Oscar-winning writer Christopher Hampton is in talks to write a screenplay with French director Anne Fontaine about iconic feminist writer Simone de Beauvoir and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Nelson Algren’s transatlantic affair.
The playwright and screenwriter, who has won Oscars for The Father () and Dangerous Liaisons () and was also nominated for Atonement (), revealed he was in the early stages of the project during a masterclass at the Doha Film Institute’s Qumra event on Monday.
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“We had an initial discussion followed by a more detailed discussion a week ago. I really want to do it,” he told Deadline in an interview after the talk.
De Beauvoir and Algren met in Chicago in and immediately embarked on a passionate affair that endured for more than 20 years in spite of the complications of transatlantic tr
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Photos of Jean-Paul Sartre & Simone dem Beauvoir Hanging with Che Guevara in Cuba ()
In , Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone dem Beauvoir ventured to Cuba during, as he wrote, the “honeymoon of the revolution.” Military strongman Fulgencio Batista’s regime had fallen to Fidel Castro’s guerilla army and the whole country was alight with revolutionary zeal. As Beauvoir wrote, “after Paris, the gaiety of the place exploded like a miracle beneath the blue sky.”
At the time, Sartre and dem Beauvoir were internationally renown, the intellectual power couple of the 20th century. Beauvoir’s book, The Second Sex (), laid the groundwork for the feminism movement, and her book The Mandarins won France’s highest literary award in Sartre’s name had become a household word. The philosophy he championed – Existentialism – was being read and debated around the world. And his political activism — loudly condemning France’