Distributed for Seagull Books
The Aftermath of War
The Aftermath of War brings together essays written in Sartre’s most creative period, just after World War II. Sartre’s extraordinary range of engagement is manifest, with writings on post-war America, the social impact of war in Europe, contemporary philosophy, race, and avant garde art. Carefully structured into sections, the essays range across Sartre’s reflections on collaboration, resistance and liberation in post-war Europe, his thoughts and observations after his extended trip to the USA in 1945, an examination of the failings of philosophical materialism, his analysis of the new revolutionary poetry of ‘negritude’, and his meditations on the visual arts, with essays on the work of Giacometti and Calder, both of whom Sartre knew well.
Table of Contents
Part One
The Republic of Silence
Paris under the Occupation
What is a Collaborator?
The End of the War
Part Two
Individualism and Conformism in the United States
Cities of America
New York, Colonial City
USA: Presentation
Part Three
Materialism and Revolution
I. The Revolutionary Myth
II. The Philosophy of Revolution
Part Four
Black Orpheus
Part Five
The Quest for the Absolute
Calder’s Mobiles
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