Jean-Paul Sartre
Writer and philosopher
The Sartre and de Beauvoir of Ukraine: how two literary academics became wartime resistance leaders
Husband-and-wife team combine teaching literature with battling cultural extinction and military invasion
So many jobs are a laughable waste of time. The greater part of any job is learning to look busy
We’ve inherited a strange cultural hangover from better times: the idea that the thing you do to survive should also double as your identity and source of pride
Read the headlines and wonder if everyone is on Ozempic and has ADHD? It’s all a bit overwhelming
Unthinkable: If you’re feeling overwhelmed and longing for real meaning, Viktor Frankl may be able to help. And if not, Albert Camus might have the answer
Why did I choose to write an absurdist novel?
Declan Toohey on how his debut, Perpetual Comedown, came into being
Happening review: Unwanted pregnancy in 1960s France
Audrey Diwan’s award-winning study has the tension of a thriller
A Yamaha 50 isn’t ideal transport when you are in labour
It was the summer of 1981 when my first daughter was born
Jean-Paul Belmondo, star of Breathless, dies aged 88
French actor, nicknamed Bébel, was one of country’s biggest stars in 1960s and 1970s
Should we cancel Immanuel Kant and Friedrich Nietzsche?
Unthinkable: Famous philosophers are being reappraised in light of their prejudices
To the atheist Sartre: Thank you for this vivid incarnation of Jesus
French existentialist philosopher wrote nativity play while a prisoner of war
In a Word . . . People
‘Hell is other people’ is a line from the play Huis Clos/No Exit by French philosopher Jean- Paul Sartre
Micheál Martin wants us to have ‘a meaningful Christmas’ – but what does that mean?
Unthinkable: Perhaps existentialism can help us navigate the Taoiseach’s suggestion
John Creedon: The outsiders who left their names in Ireland
The influence of foreigners is still seen across Ireland’s place names today
Ghost of Juliette Gréco lingers over Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Paris Letter: Performer sang of her beloved city, of amour, rebellion and fleeting pleasures
Charlie Hebdo staff uphold ‘fight for liberty’ at trial over massacre
Wounded survivors testify in Paris detailing massacre which killed 12 of their colleagues
Ten philosophers to help us through the coronavirus crisis
Unthinkable: Sartre and Schopenhauer make the list but Peig Sayers deserves inclusion too
Breda O’Brien: There is something particularly vile about Jean Vanier
In the midst of such darkness, how can one find the light?
There’s no meaning of life. Now, happy Christmas!
Unthinkable: Meaning can be found in everything from a loving relationship to playing chess, says philosopher Jonathan Rowson
September scents: Four grown-up perfumes for the new season
Winning fragrances from Byredo, Timothy Han/Edition, Chanel and Jo Malone
‘We’re fed up with white Parisian men making films about us’
Film-maker Nadir Dendoune is reappropriating the north African immigrant story
Can a novel also be a work of philosophy?
Unthinkable: Literature allows us capture ‘weirdness’ of life, says Matthew McKeever
Sheila O’Donnell: Architect who has spent a lifetime building connections
Riba’s Woman Architect of the Year prize just the latest big award for Irishwoman
Claude Lanzmann, chronicler of the Holocaust, dies aged 92
Film director most well known for ‘Shoah’ which he spent 12 years making
Chris Johns: Brexit semantics game focuses on meaning of ‘meaningful’
Shift in Brexit deadline or further fudge awaits as hard Brexiteers run clock down
May 1968 and the death of a French revolution
Sorbonne protests 50 years ago ushered in a new era. Today’s students are ‘too busy’ to protest
Joshua and Parker will see plenty of thinking - and bruising
Joshua: ‘Boxing is not just about knocking people out. It’s healthy living, discipline’
In a word . . . Philosophy
So much of our youth was wasted on slight philosophies offering shallow answers to overwhelming questions
Ruben Östlund: ‘I worry that left-wing people misunderstand Marx’
An encounter with homeless children in Ireland spurred the director to make films that challenge political beliefs
Digital world blatantly ignoring individuals’ rights
WWW has shifted away from opportunities of World Wide Web into the World Wild West
Simone de Beauvoir’s ‘contingent’ lovers fight over letters
Long after existentialist philosopher’s death, simmering rivalry links protagonists
Tales from bedsitland: a grubby rite of passage for young Irish
Irish Times readers share their experiences of shared toilets and one-bar electric heaters
Crosswords & Puzzles
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Common Ground
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
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