<p>Jean-Paul Sartre was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century. His influence extends beyond academic philosophy to areas as diverse as anti-colonial movements, youth culture, literary criticism, and artistic developments around the world.</p><p>Beginning with an introduction and biography of Jean-Paul Sartre by Matthew C. Eshleman, 42 chapters by a team of international contributors cover all the major aspects of Sartre’s thought in the following key areas:</p><ul> <p> </p> <li>Sartre’s philosophical and historical context</li> <li>Sartre and phenomenology</li> <li>Sartre, existentialism, and ontology</li> <li>Sartre and ethics</li> <li>Sartre and political theory</li> <li>Aesthetics, literature, and biography</li> <li>Sartre’s engagements with other thinkers.</li> </ul><p><em>The Sartrean Mind</em> is the most comprehensive collection on Sartre published to date. It is essential reading for students and researchers in philosophy, as well as for those in related disciplines where Sartre’s work has continuing importance, such as literature, French studies, and politics.</p> <p><em>Foreword Ronald Santoni</em> Introduction <i>Matthew C. Eshleman </i>A Sketch of Sartre’s Life <i>Matthew C. Eshleman </i><b>Part I:</b> <b>Philosophical Context </b>1. French Influences <i>Bruce Baugh </i>2. Sartre and the Transcendental Tradition <i>Sorin Baiasu </i>3. Sartre and his German Influences <i>David Sherman </i>4. Sartre and Gestalt Psychology <i>Adrian Mirvish </i>5. The Historical Origins of Sartre’s Account of Temporality <i>Grégory Cormann</i> <b>Part II: Sartre and Phenomenology </b>6. Sartrean Reflection: Pure and Impure <i>Kenneth Williford </i>7. Sartre’s Phenomenological Psychology of Imagination <i>Jonathan Webber </i>8. Sartre on the Emotions <i>Daniel Vanello </i>9. The Transcendence of the Ego: Reasoning and Stakes <i>Vincent de Coorebyter </i><b>Part III:</b> <b>Sartre, Existentialism, and Ontology </b>10. On the Structure and Method of <em>Being and Nothingness</em> <i>Matthew C. Eshleman </i>11. Sartre on Intentionality and Pre-Reflective Consciousness <i>Mark Rowlands </i>12. Negation, Nonbeing, and Nothingness <i>Christopher Erhard </i>13. Anguish and Bad Faith <i>Lior Levy </i>14. It's about that Time: Sartre’s Theory of Temporality <i>Curtis Sommerlatte </i>15. Intersubjectivity and "The Look" <i>Constance L. Mui </i>16. Sartre on the Body <i>Katherine Morris </i>17. Freedom: Being and Doing <i>David Detmer </i>18. "Existential Psychoanalysis" <i>Stuart Z. Charmé </i>19. Ontology and Metaphysics <i>Christophe Perrin </i><b>Part IV: Ethics </b>20. Ethics of Authenticity <i>William Remley </i>21. Ethics as Flourishing Humanity <i>Gail Linsenbard </i>22. Integral Humanity as Goal in Sartre’s 1964 Rome Lecture <i>Elizabeth A. Bowman and Robert V. Stone </i>23. <em>Hope Now</em> <i>Julien Murphy</i> <b>Part V: Political Theory </b>24. Existential Marxism <i>Ronald Aronson </i>25. Search for a Method <i>William McBride </i>26. Sartre and Imperialism <em>Oliver Gloag </em>27. The Logics of the <em>Critique</em> <i>Matthew C. Ally </i>28. Political Violence <i>Michael Flemming </i>29. Recasting Négritude: Jean-Paul Sartre and Black Intellectuals in Post-war France <i>Bennetta Jules-Rosette </i>30. Intersubjectivity Between Group and Seriality from the Early to the Later Sartre <i>Juliette Simont </i>31. Sartre: May 1968 and Beyond <i>David Drake </i><b>Part VI: Aesthetics, Literature, and Biography </b>32. Sartre’s Fiction <i>Craig Vasey</i> 33. Sartre’s Conception of Theater: Theory and Practice <i>Adrian van den Hoven </i>34. Biography Good, Autobiography Bad: A Fundamental Sartrean Paradox? <i>John Ireland </i>35. Sartre and the Arts <i>Sophie Astier-Vezon </i><b>Part VII: Engagements and Extensions </b>36. Sartre and Merleau-Ponty <i>Florence Caeymaex and Grégory Cormann </i>37. Posthuman Horizons: Contemporary Responses to Sartre's Philosophy <i>Nik Farrell Fox </i>38. Sartre’s Influence in Black Existentialism <i>Lewis R. Gordon </i>39. Nature as Threat and Escape in the Philosophies of Sartre and Beauvoir <i>Shannon Musset </i>40. Sartre and Anarchism <i>T. Storm Heter </i>41. Sartre and Meta-Ethics <i>Peter Poellner </i>42. Sartre and Contemporary Philosophy of Consciousness <i>Manfred Frank and Gerhard Preyer. Index</i></p>