Sartre, Jean-Paul (1905-1980) is a French existentialist philosopher and author. Taught (1931-1945) in Le Havre, Laon, and Paris lycees, Satre was a served in the resistance and continued to fight injustice through his life – most notably campaigning for a free Algeria. He was awarded but refused 1964 Nobel Prize for literature. Expounded his philosophy of Existentialism in novels La Nausee (1938) and Les Chemmins de la liberte (trilogy, 1945-49); plays as Les Mouches (1943), Huis-clos (1944), Les Mains sales (1948), Le diable et le bon dieu (1951), séquestrés d’Altona (1959); and philosophical works as L’Imagination (1936), L’Imaginaire (1940), L’Être et le neant (1943), L’Existentialisme est un humanisme (1946); also wrote Les Mots (1963, autobiography) and Flaubert (1971, literary study). With Simone de Beauvoir founded and edited review Les Temps Modernes (1946).
Arendt, Hannah
Hannah Arendt was born on October 14, 1906, in Hanover, in Wilhelmine Germany. After graduating from high school in Koenigsberg in 1924, Arendt began to study theology that fall at the University of Marburg, where she met the young philosopher Martin Heidegger. Her...
