Jean Wahl (1888-1974), once considered by the likes of Georges
Bataille, Gilles Deleuze, Emmanuel Levinas, and Gabriel Marcel to
be among the greatest French philosophers, has today nearly been
forgotten outside France. Yet his influence on French philosophical
thought can hardly be overestimated. Levinas wrote that "during
over a half century of teaching and research, [Wahl] was the life
force of the academic, extra-academic, and even, to a degree
anti-academic philosophy necessary to a great culture." And
Deleuze, for his part, commented that "Apart from Sartre, who
remained caught none the less in the trap of the verb to be, the
most important philosopher in France was Jean Wahl." Besides
engaging with the likes of Bataille, Bergson, Deleuze, Derrida,
Levinas, Maritain, and Sartre, Wahl also played a significant role,
in some cases almost singlehandedly, in introducing French
philosophy to movements like existentialism, and American
pragmatism and literature, and thinkers like Hegel, Kierkegaard,
Nietzsche, Jaspers, and Heidegger. Yet Wahl was also an original
philosopher and poet in his own right. This volume of selections
from Wahl's philosophical writings makes a selection of his most
important work available to the English-speaking philosophical
community for the first time. Jean Wahl was Professor of Philosophy
at the Sorbonne from 1936 to 1967, save during World War II, which
he spent in the United States, having escaped from the Drancy
internment camp. His books to appear in English include The
Pluralist Philosophies of England and America (Open Court, 1925),
The Philosopher's Way (Oxford UP, 1948), A Short History of
Existentialism (Philosophical Library, 1949), and Philosophies of
Existence (Schocken, 1969).
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