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Nietzsche and the German Tradition
Year of Publication: 2003
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2003. XVIII, 314 pp.
ISBN 978-3-03910-060-6 / US-ISBN 978-0-8204-6876-1  pb.
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SFR 78.00 * 53.30 ** 54.80 49.80 £ 44.80 US-$ 77.95
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Discipline
  Germanic Languages and Literatures
  Philosophy
Book synopsis
The essays collected in this volume are selected papers from the 7th Annual Conference of the Friedrich Nietzsche Society, which was held at the University of St Andrews in September 1997. The three distinct but related issues examined in this book are centrally important to the search for Nietzsche's intellectual and cultural roots. The first concerns Nietzsche's attitudes to his German cultural tradition, the second is Nietzsche's view of his German present, and the final issue is the extent to which dealing with Nietzsche and his legacies has itself become a tradition since his death in 1900. Implicitly or explicitly, the contributors reveal Nietzsche's ambivalent, double-edged attitude to tradition. All the essays collected here take account of the latest developments in Nietzsche scholarship and, together, make an important contribution both to understanding the ways in which Nietzsche problematises tradition and to recognising the difficulties, and opportunities, arising from the Nietzschean tradition(s) of the last hundred years.
Contents
Contents: Daniel W. Conway: Nietzsche's Germano-mania - Thomas H. Brobjer: Nietzsche as German Philosopher: His Reading of the Classical German Philosophers - Christa Davis Acampora: 'The Contest Between Nietzsche and Homer': Revaluing the Homeric Question - Duncan Large: 'Der Bauernaufstand des Geistes': Nietzsche, Luther and the Reformation - Ben Morgan: Fear and Self-Control in The Antichrist: Nietzsche's Prussian Past - Christopher Janaway: Schopenhauer as Nietzsche's Educator - Hans-Gerd von Seggern: Nietzsches (anti-)naturalistische Ästhetik in der Geburt der Tragödie - Paul J. M. van Tongeren: Nietzsche's Naturalism - Jim Urpeth: Nietzsche and the Rapture of Aesthetic Disinterestedness: A Response to Heidegger - Gerd Schank: Race and Breeding in Nietzsche's Philosophy - Malcolm Humble: Heinrich Mann and Arnold Zweig: Left-Wing Nietzscheans? - Nicholas Martin: Nietzsche in the GDR: History of a Taboo.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Editor: Nicholas Martin is Lecturer in German at the University of St Andrews. He is the author of Nietzsche and Schiller: Untimely Aesthetics and the translator of Gianni Vattimo, Nietzsche: An Introduction. He has recently published '«Fighting a Philosophy»: The Figure of Nietzsche in British Propaganda of the First World War', Modern Language Review, 98 (2003).
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