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Why Nietzsche Now? edited by Daniel O'Hara.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
O'Hara, Daniel T., Editor.
Contributor:
O'Hara, Daniel T., 1948-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 online resource xii, 441 pages) : portraits)
Edition:
1st cloth ed.
Place of Publication:
Indiana University Press 1985
Bloomington : Indiana University Press, 1985.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Why has Nietzsche recently emerged as an important figure of reference in the critical discourse about contemporary culture? Major commentaries on Nietzsche by Heidegger and Derrida, among others, have provoked much current debate about the meaning and present-day relevance of Nietzsche's writings. Is Nietzsche the philosopher of the will to dominate the earth through science and technology, as characterized by Heidegger, or is he the playful deconstructive genealogist of the historical will to power, as construed by Derrida? In this valuable volume, distinguished philosophers and literary theorists address these issues through readings of Nietzsche's major texts, analyses of his positions in relation to precursors and inheritors, and assessments of the critical impact of Nietzsche's thought. Contributors include David Allison, Charles Altieri, Jonathan Arac, Paul Bove, Joseph Buttigieg, Stanley Corngold, Rudolph Gasche, Martin Heidegger, David Farrell Krell, Rudolph E. Kuenzli, George McFadden, J. Hillis Miller, Daniel T. O'Hara, Joseph Riddell, Gary Shapiro, Hugh J. Silverman, Tracy B. Strong, and Cornel West.
Contents:
1. Introduction: The prophet of our laughter: or Nietzsche as -educator? / Daniel T. O'Hara
2. Readings: Tragedy, satyr-play, and telling silence in Nietzsche's thought of eternal recurrence (translated by David Farrell Krell) / Martin Heidegger
Dismembering and disremembering in Nietzsche's "On truth and lies in a nonmoral sense" / J. Hillis Miller
The question of the self in Nietzsche during the axial period (1882-1888) / Stanley Corngold
Nietzsche's zerography: Thus spoke Zarathustra / Rudolf E. Kuenzli
Nietzsche's graffito: a reading of The antichrist / Gary Shapiro
The autobiographical textuality of Nietzsche's Ecce homo / Hugh J. Silverman
3. Affinities and differences: Der Maulwurf: die philosophische Wühlarbeit bei Kant, Hegel und Nietzsche (The mole: philosophic burrowing in Kant, Hegel, and Nietzsche) / David Farrell Krell
The struggle against meta (Phantasma) physics: Nietzsche, Joyce, and the "excess of history" / Joseph Buttigieg
"Neo-Nietzschean clatter" -speculation and the modernist poetic image / Joseph Riddel
Nietzsche's prefiguration of postmodern American philosophy / Cornel West
Autobiography as Gestalt: Nietzsche's Ecce homo / Rodolphe Gasche
4. Critiques: Nietzsche knows no Noumenon / David Allison
Oedipus as hero: family and family metaphors in Nietzsche / Tracy B. Strong
Nietzschean values in comic writing / George McFadden
Mendacious innocents, or, The modern genealogist as conscientious intellectual: Nietzsche, Foucault, Said / Paul Bove
Ecce homo: narcissism, power, pathos, and the status of autobiographical representations / Charles Altieri
Aesthetics, rhetoric, history: Paul de Man and the American use of Nietzsche / Jonathan Arac.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-253-05435-4
OCLC:
1259586153

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