The author, art theorist and first culture minister of France, who died 50 years ago, is celebrated with more than 130 events ...
It is good to see Carlin Romano’s essay on André Malraux, an author who merits much more attention than he receives (“André Malraux: the Last American Frenchman,” The Chronicle Review, March 11). It’s ...
André Malraux (1901-76) did not work 35-hour weeks. Adventurer, smuggler, wheeler-dealer, rare-book impresario -- and, yes, world-renowned novelist, international intellectual, freedom fighter in ...
A review of Malraux: A Life, by Olivier Todd, translated by Joseph West. Intellectuals by and large disgraced the twentieth century. With rare exceptions, they whored after strange gods, of which the ...
An eloquent, nervous French voice last week gave an answer to the clamor of crisis. The answer: De Gaulle. It was a startling new voice in the Gaullist camp. André Malraux, once one of Communism’s ...
Though France has been in relative decline as a great power since 1939—some would say, since 1914—its cultural influence has survived to a remarkable degree the loss of colonies, markets, and what was ...
During the middle of the past century, two Frenchmen were known and admired around the world. They were General de Gaulle and André Malraux. Malraux became a celebrity in the 1930s as a writer, ...
The name Andre Malraux and the struggle for freedom of the people of Bangladesh remain inseparable. Back in 1971, an international convention, entitled “World Meet on Bangladesh,” was organized on ...
Georges André Malraux (3 November 1901 – 23 November 1976) was a French novelist, art theorist, and minister of cultural affairs. Malraux's novel La Condition Humaine (Man's Fate) (1933) won the Prix ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results