Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change
Based on extensive new material, much of it unpublished, by and about Sartre from archives across Europe, this book explores Sartre's lifelong relationship with Italy, its culture, society and, above all, its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 examines the relationships Sartre forged with a number of Italian liberal, leftist and communist intellectuals after the war. Immediately drawing 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 crisis in Italy and, by the late 1950s, in Eastern Europe. Reconstructing the networks they established through cultural organisations 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, the book reconstructs Sartre's activities and the impact they had in a way that Sartre 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 organisational problems, in Poland and Czechoslovakia his work was taken in a very different direction, where intellectuals would go on to assume real political responsibility.

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Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change
Based on extensive new material, much of it unpublished, by and about Sartre from archives across Europe, this book explores Sartre's lifelong relationship with Italy, its culture, society and, above all, its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 examines the relationships Sartre forged with a number of Italian liberal, leftist and communist intellectuals after the war. Immediately drawing 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 crisis in Italy and, by the late 1950s, in Eastern Europe. Reconstructing the networks they established through cultural organisations 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, the book reconstructs Sartre's activities and the impact they had in a way that Sartre 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 organisational problems, in Poland and Czechoslovakia his work was taken in a very different direction, where intellectuals would go on to assume real political responsibility.

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Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change

Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change

by Nancy Jachec
Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change

Italy, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Europe's Cold War: Ethics, Resistance, Political Change

by Nancy Jachec

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Overview

Based on extensive new material, much of it unpublished, 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 examines the relationships Sartre forged with a number of Italian liberal, leftist and communist intellectuals after the war. Immediately drawing 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 crisis in Italy and, by the late 1950s, in Eastern Europe. Reconstructing the networks they established through cultural organisations 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, the book reconstructs Sartre's activities and the impact they had in a way that Sartre 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 organisational problems, in Poland and Czechoslovakia his work was taken in a very different direction, where intellectuals would go on to assume real political responsibility.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350433816
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 08/21/2025
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

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

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Introduction: Sartre in Italy, Land of Dialogue
1. The Naples Writings, 1936-1938: Toward a Constructive Literature
2. 'The relation between us…can only be collaboration': Sartre's returban to Italy, 1946
3. 'A Carnets for the Cold War'” Queen Albemarle or the Last Tourist, 1951-1952
4. 'If you want peace, prepare for peace': The WPC, and Détente with Eastern Europe, 1952-1954
5. The SEC's East-West Dialogue, 1956 and the Polish Origin of 'Marxism and Existentialism'
6. Keeping the Door Open: The Moscow Peace Conference, the Leningrad Roundtable and Sartre's Trip to Czechoslovakia, 1962-1964
7. Subjectivity and Society: The Gramsci Institute Lectures, 1961 and 1964
8. Between Gramsci and Gobetti: Sartre's Libertarian Socialism, 1965-1973
9. Beyond Sartre: from De-Stalinisation to Dissent in Poland and Czechoslovakia, 1960-1980
Conclusion: Hope Now
Bibliography
Index

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