Once the most celebrated intellectual, Jean-Paul Sartre had, until quite recently, almost faded from view.He was already being attacked for his 'blindness' about the Soviet gulags shortly after his death in 1980, andeven his humanist Existentialism was ridiculed for its optimism, voluntarism and sheer energetic reach.Sartre's whole career was offensive both to the so-called Nouveaux Philosophes, whose mediocre attainments hadonly a fervid anti-Communism to attract any attention, and to the post-structuralists and Post-Modernists who,with few exceptions, had lapsed into a sullen technological narcissism deeply at odds with Sartre's populismand his heroic public politics. The immense sprawl of Sartre's work as novelist, essayist, playwright,biographer, philosopher, political intellectual, engaged activist, seemed to repel more people than itattracted. From being the most quoted of the French maîtres penseurs, he became, in the space of abouttwenty years, the least read and the least analysed. His courageous positions on Algeria and Vietnam wereforgotten. So were his work on behalf of the oppressed, his gutsy appearance as a Maoist radical during the1968 student demonstrations in Paris, as well as his extraordinary range and literary distinction (for whichhe both won, and rejected, the Nobel Prize for Literature). He had become a maligned ex-celebrity, except inthe Anglo-American world, where he had never been taken seriously as a philosopher and was always readsomewhat condescendingly as a quaint occasional novelist and memoirist, insufficiently anti-Communist, notquite as chic and compelling as (the far less talented) Camus.