Category: Exiled Fire: The Forgotten Lives of a Cold War Dream
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The Silence of the Thinker: Jean-Paul Sartre(1956-1968)
In 1956, amid mounting Cold War tensions and growing frustration with Western imperialism, Jean-Paul Sartre made a dramatic and controversial decision: he accepted exile to East Berlin under the West’s newly enacted Welcome to Leave policy. Departing Paris by train, accompanied by a flurry of journalists, anti-Gaullist activists, and a tearful Simone de Beauvoir, Sartre…
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Welcome to Leave: When the West Let Its Conscience Go
By the early 1950s, amid Red Scare hysteria and the rise of NATO, Western governments began reimagining how to handle their most vocal internal critics: the leftist thinkers, poets, professors, and protest singers who refused to conform. But rather than silencing them through imprisonment or blacklisting, a new, unsettling policy took shape—one cloaked in civility,…
