has
been a professor at New York University for sixty-five years. For nearly
fifty years he directed the university's Center for French Literature
and Civilization, which he made into a crucial venue for French
intellectual life in New York. As a self-described "ocean ferryman," a
friend and fellow traveler of Samuel Beckett, Hélène Cixous, Eugène
Ionesco, Alain Robbe-Grillet, and many others, he built a bridge between
the worlds of literature, philosophy, and art, as well as politics and
economics, between New York and Paris. His work as a scholar, essayist
and curator has allowed many encounters between creative figures,
scholars and cultural leaders.