•  2
    9. Camus the Unbeliever
    In Jonathan Judaken & Robert Bernasconi (eds.), Situating Existentialism: Key Texts in Context, Columbia University Press. pp. 256-276. 2012.
  •  14
    Sartre's Individualist Social Theory
    Télos 1973 (16): 68-91. 1973.
  •  14
    Discussion of 'Sartre and Stalin'
    Sartre Studies International 3 (1): 16-21. 1997.
  •  13
    L'Idiot de la famille: The Ultimate Sartre?
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1974 (20): 90-107. 1974.
  •  33
    Discussion of 'sartre and stalin'
    Sartre Studies International 3 (1): 16-21. 1997.
  •  5
    Sartre on the American Working Class Seven Articles in Combat from 6 to 30 June, 1945
    with Jean-Paul Sartre
    Sartre Studies International 6 (1): 1-22. 2000.
    In early 1945, with the war not yet over, Sartre travelled to the United States for the first time. He travelled with a group of correspondents who were invited in order to influence French public opinion favourably towards the United States.1 Sartre was sent by his friend Albert Camus to report back to Combat, the leading newspaper of the independent left. Once invited, he arranged also to report back to the conservative newspaper, Le Figaro. Simone de Beauvoir reports that learning of Camus’ i…Read more
  •  55
    The following books have been received and are available for review. Please contact the Reviews Editor: jim. oshea@ ucd. ie (review)
    with John Abromeit, Mark W. Cobb, Lilian Alweiss, Susan J. Armstrong, Richard G. Botzler, Robin Attfield, Gordon Baker, Katherine Morris, and Etienne Balibar
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (4). 2004.
  •  12
    We: Reviving Social Hope
    University of Chicago Press. 2017.
    The election of Donald Trump has exposed American society’s profound crisis of hope. By 2016 a generation of shrinking employment, rising inequality, the attack on public education, and the shredding of the social safety net, had set the stage for stunning insurgencies at opposite ends of the political spectrum. Against this dire background, Ronald Aronson offers an answer. He argues for a unique conception of social hope, one with the power for understanding and acting upon the present situatio…Read more
  •  41
    Revisiting Existential Marxism
    Sartre Studies International 25 (2): 92-98. 2019.
    Alfred Betschart has claimed that the project of existential Marxism is a contradiction in terms, but this argument, even when supported by many experts and quotes from Sartre’s 1975 interview, misses the point of my Boston Review article, “The Philosophy of Our Time.” I believe the important argument today is not about whether we can prove that Sartre ever became a full-fledged Marxist, but rather about the political and philosophical possibility, and importance today, of existentialist Marxism…Read more
  •  23
    Hope after hope?
    Social Research: An International Quarterly 66 (2). 1999.
  •  4
    Review of the Principle of Hope (review)
    History and Theory 30 (2): 220-232. 1991.
  • Review (review)
    History and Theory 30 220-232. 1991.
  •  5996
    Ernst Bloch, "the principle of hope" (review)
    History and Theory 30 (2): 220. 1991.
  •  20
    Camus versus Sartre: The Unresolved Conflict
    Sartre Studies International 11 (1-2): 302-310. 2005.
    By what incredible foresight did the most significant intellectual quarrel of the twentieth century anticipate the major issue of the twenty-first? When Camus and Sartre parted ways in 1952, the main question dividing them was political violence—specifically, that of communism. And as they continued to jibe at each other during the next decade, especially during the war in Algeria, one of the major issues between them became terrorism. The 1957 and 1964 Nobel Laureates were divided sharply over …Read more
  •  49
    Sartre’s Political Theory (review)
    Radical Philosophy Review of Books 8 (8): 25-29. 1993.
  • Books received (review)
    Philosophical Forum 393. 1987.
  •  13
    Sartre, Camus, and the Caliban Articles
    Sartre Studies International 7 (2): 1-7. 2001.
    In October and November, 1948, an exchange on democracy between Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus appeared in Jean Daniel's monthly Caliban. At first glance these articles confirm the prevailing sense that the 1952 split was inevitable. But reading the break back into the relationship presents it with a kind of necessity, corresponding to the law of "analysis after the event" described by Doris Lessing. Inasmuch as it resulted in a break, we are tempted to focus from the start on "the laws of di…Read more
  •  3
    David Schweickart’s Left-Over Marxism (review)
    Radical Philosophy Review of Books 11 (9): 31-35. 1995.
  •  7
    Truth and Existence
    with Jean Paul Sartre and Arlette Elkaïm-Sartre
    University of Chicago Press. 1992.
    Truth and Existence, written in response to Martin Heidegger's Essence of Truth, is a product of the years when Sartre was reaching full stature as a philosopher, novelist, playwright, essayist, and political activist. This concise and engaging text not only presents Sartre's ontology of truth but also addresses the key moral questions of freedom, action, and bad faith. Truth and Existence is introduced by an extended biographical, historical, and analytical essay by Ronald Aronson. "Truth and E…Read more
  •  39
    Living Without God: Reply to Comments
    Sartre Studies International 16 (2): 107-113. 2010.
  •  62
    Thank who very much?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 34 33-36. 2006.
  •  29
    Introduction
    Sartre Studies International 4 (2): 43-44. 1998.
  •  35
    Sartre versus Camus
    Radical Philosophy Review 4 (1-2): 102-116. 2001.
    The author argues for a conjunction of Albert Camus’s “idealism” with Jean-Paul Sartre’s “dialectical realism” as a corrective to the limitation of each for the sake of a viable transformative politics.
  •  15
    Celebrating the Critique’s Fiftieth Anniversary
    Sartre Studies International 16 (2): 1-16. 2010.
  • Social Madness
    Radical Philosophy 40 13. 1985.
  •  2
    Sartre after marxism
    In Adrian Mirvish & Adrian Van den Hoven (eds.), New Perspectives on Sartre, Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 270. 2010.
  •  28
    Pinker and progress
    History and Theory 52 (2): 246-264. 2013.
    Condorcet's classical Enlightenment statement of human progress became an essential element of nineteenth- and twentieth-century consciousness, but by the millennium grand narratives had fallen victim to a disillusioned cultural climate. Now Steven Pinker, like Condorcet drawing on a wide range of contemporary “knowledges,” has reasserted a sweeping narrative of human progress in The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. Mapping a spectacular long-term decline in person-on-pers…Read more