Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe’s Cold War

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A01=Nancy Jachec
Author_Nancy Jachec
Category=NHD
Category=NHTW
Category=QDTQ
Category=QDTS
collaboration
communism
cultural history
Czechoslovakia
de-Stalinisation
dialogue
dissent
Eastern Europe
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethics
European history
Existentialism
fascism
Gobetti
Gramsci
Gramsci Institute Lectures
intellectual history
Iron Curtain
Italian history
Leningrad Roundtable
Libertarian Socialism
Marxism
morality
Moscow Peace Conference
Naples
networks
peace
Poland
political philosophy
revolution
Second World War
social philosophy
society
subjectivity
World War Two

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350433816
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on extensive, largely unpublished material by and about Sartre from archives across Europe, this book explores Sartre’s lifelong relationship with Italy, its culture, society and, above all, its intellectual left.

Starting with his dawning awareness of politics as foremost a moral responsibility during his first tourist trips to Naples in the 1930s and the poverty he encountered there, Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe’s Cold War then examines the relationships Sartre forged with a number of Italian liberal, leftist and communist intellectuals after the war. Not only did they immediately draw him into debates over the ethical crisis that they held responsible for fascism, the war, and now, Europe’s Cold War. Several of them became lifelong friends of his, as well as collaborators in a number of efforts to address that moral crisis in Italy and, by the late 1950s, in Eastern Europe. Reconstructing the networks they established through cultural organizations they founded themselves, Nancy Jachec traces how Sartre and his ideas were brought into the Soviet Union, Poland and Czechoslovakia in pursuit of a democratic socialism.

Using private correspondence, press reports, memoirs, embassy dispatches, government committee minutes, and surveillance and intelligence reports from Eastern and Western sources, this book reconstructs Sartre’s activities and the impact they had in a way that he did not foresee. While his many discussions with his Italian peers on the theme of political morality led him to support the New Left in spite of its organizational problems, in Poland and Czechoslovakia his work was taken in a very different direction, where intellectuals would go on to assume real political responsibility.

Nancy Jachec previously held a Leverhulme Fellowship and is the author of Europe’s Intellectuals and the Cold War (2015).

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