| Author Quoted | Jean Paul Sartre | 
		
			| Title Quoted | Respectful Prostitute | 
		
			| Date (Year/Month/Day) | 1963/11/26 | 
		
			| Imprint | [S.l.] : [s.n.]. 1946 | 
		
			| Quotation | Read Sartre's Respectful Prostitute. All I had ever heard about it ran it down, but it is a smasher! Best thing of his I have read, and one of the best on the racequestion. Certainly it is farcical, arbitrary, in a way "propaganda." And yet it is true. Simple: it has to be simple. And no Southerner has ever stated the Southern case as simply and blandly as his characters, the Senator and Fred. Maybe it is little more than a vaudeville act, but a very good one. The main thing wrong with it is that no signature would have been necessary to save the white man who shot the Negro. | 
		
			| Quotation Source | Dancing in the Water of Life: Seeking Peace in the Hermitage. The Journals of Thomas Merton, Volume 5, 1963-1965.; Edited by Robert E. Daggy. / San Francisco : Harper Collins. 1997, p. 39 | 
		
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			| Link to Merton's Copy | 
  					 
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