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Nietzsche, the Aristocratic Rebel: Intellectual Biography and Critical Balance-Sheet [Minkštas viršelis]

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, Translated by , Introduction by
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 1052 pages, aukštis x plotis: 228x152 mm, Illustrations
  • Serija: Historical Materialism
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: Haymarket Books
  • ISBN-10: 1642593400
  • ISBN-13: 9781642593402
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 1052 pages, aukštis x plotis: 228x152 mm, Illustrations
  • Serija: Historical Materialism
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2021
  • Leidėjas: Haymarket Books
  • ISBN-10: 1642593400
  • ISBN-13: 9781642593402
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Perhaps no philosopher is more of a conundrum than Nietzsche, the solitary rebel, poet, wayfarer, anti-revolutionary Aufklärer and theorist of aristocratic radicalism. His accusers identify in his 'superman' the origins of Nazism, and thus issue an irrevocable condemnation; his defenders pursue a hermeneutics of innocence founded ultimately in allegory.



In a work widely regarded as the most important contribution to Nietzschean studies in recent decades, Domenico Losurdo instead pursues a less reductive strategy. Taking literally the ruthless implications of Nietzsche's anti-democratic thinkinghis celebration of slavery, of war and colonial expansion, and eugenicshe nevertheless refuses to treat these from the perspective of the mid-twentieth century. In doing so, he restores Nietzsche's works to their complex nineteenth-century context, and presents a more compelling account of the importance of Nietzsche as philosopher than can be expected from his many contemporary apologists.



Originally published in Italian by Bollati Boringhieri Editore as Domenico Losurdo, Nietzsche, il ribelle aristocratico: Biografia intellettuale e bilancio critico, Turin, 2002.

Recenzijos

"[ A] magisterial opus."



Matt McManus

















"[ A] welcome addition to the English corpus of Nietzsche scholarship. Gregor Bentons translation provides a smooth and accessible read and Harrison Fluss introduction situates Losurdos text within the world of English-speaking Nietzsche studies. Nietzsche will be a useful resource for any scholar interested in a historical biography of the thinker."







Jacob Vangeest

Introduction to the English-Language Edition 1(18)
Harrison Fluss
Part 1: Nietzsche in His Time: In Struggle against Socratism and Judaism
Pt 1 The Crisis of Culture from Socrates to the Paris Commune
19(67)
1 The Birth of Tragedy as a Re-interpretation of Hellenism?
19(4)
2 Tragic Hellenism as Antidote to 'Weak' Modernity
23(3)
3 The Paris Commune and the Threat of a 'Horrifying Destruction' of Culture
26(4)
4 The Suicide of Tragic Hellenism as Metaphor for the Suicide of the ancien regime
30(4)
5 From the Anti-Napoleonic Wars to The Birth of Tragedy
34(4)
6 The Young Nietzsche's Adherence to German National Liberalism
38(1)
7 German Pessimism, 'Serious View of the World', 'Tragic View of the World'
39(3)
8 The 'German Spirit' as 'Saviour' and 'Redeemer' of Zivilisation
42(3)
9 'Optimism', 'Happiness' and Revolutionary Drift: Nietzsche's Radicalism
45(5)
10 An Anti-Pelagian Reconquest of Christianity?
50(3)
11 Christianity as Subversive and a 'Religion of the Learned'
53(3)
12 Eva, Persephone and Prometheus: The Reinterpretation of Original Sin
56(2)
13 'Greek Serenity', 'Sensualism' and Socialism
58(4)
14 The Apolline, the Dionysiac and the Social Question
62(5)
15 Athens and Jerusalem; Apollo and Jesus, Dionysus and Apollo
67(4)
16 Art, Politics and Kulturkritik
71(4)
17 An Appeal for a 'Struggle against Civilisation'
75(3)
18 Manifesto of the Party of the Tragic View of the World
78(4)
19 Universal History, Universal Judgement, Divine Justice, Theodicy, Cosmodicy
82(4)
Pt 2 Tradition, Myth and the Critique of Revolution
86(22)
1 'Prejudice' and 'Instinct': Burke and Nietzsche
86(4)
2 Hubris of Reason and 'Neocriticistic' Reaction
90(5)
3 The Radicalisation of Neo-criticism: Truth as Metaphor
95(2)
4 Human Rights and Anthropocentrism
97(3)
5 'Metaphysics of Genius' and Cultural Elitism
100(6)
6 The 'Doric State' as Dictatorship in the Service of the Production of Genius
106(2)
Pt 3 Socratism and Present-Day Judaism
108(29)
1 Aryan 'Tragic Profundity' and the 'Despicable Jewish Phrase'
108(5)
2 Socratism and the Jewish Press in the Struggle against Germanness
113(5)
3 Judaism in Music and in The Birth of Tragedy
118(5)
4 Dionysian Germany and the 'Treacherous Dwarfs'
123(4)
5 Alexandrianism, Judaism and the 'Jewish-Roman' World
127(4)
6 On the Threshold of a Conspiracy Theory
131(6)
Pt 4 The Founding of the Second Reich, and Conflicting Myths of Origin
137(27)
1 In Search of Hellenism and a volkstumlich Germanness
137(5)
2 Greeks, Christians, Germans and Indo-Europeans
142(3)
3 Nietzsche and the Greco-Germanic Myth of 'Origin'
145(3)
4 Imitation of France and Germany's Abdication of its Mission
148(3)
5 Social Conflict and the National-Liberal Recovery of the 'Old Faith'
151(3)
6 The Young Nietzsche, the Struggle against 'Secularisation' and the Defence of the 'Old Faith'
154(5)
7 'Secularisation' and Crisis of Myths of Origin
159(5)
Pt 5 From the 'Judaism' of Socrates to the 'Judaism' of Strauss
164(27)
1 Myths of Origin and Anti-Semitism
164(3)
2 Strauss, Judaism and the Threat to German Language and Identity
167(6)
3 'Jewish International' and 'Aesthetic International'
173(4)
4 Superficial Culture Gebildetheit and Judaism
177(2)
5 Philistinism and Judaism
179(4)
6 Judeophobia, Anti-Semitism and Theoretical and Artistic Surplus in Nietzsche and Wagner
183(8)
Part 2: Nietzsche in His Time: Four Successive Approaches to the Critique of Revolution
Pt 6 The 'Solitary Rebel' Breaks with Tradition and the 'Popular Community'
191(33)
1 Prussia's 'Popular Enlightenment' as Betrayal of the 'True German Spirit'
191(2)
2 The Germanic Myth of Origin and the Condemnation of Hegel
193(5)
3 Delegitimisation of Modernity and Diagnosis of the 'Historical Sickness'
198(2)
4 From the 'Christian' Critique of the Philosophy of History to the Critique of the Philosophy of History as Secularised Christianity
200(4)
5 Philosophy of History, Modernity and Massification
204(2)
6 Philosophy of History, Elitism and the Return of Anthropocentrism
206(3)
7 Cult of Tradition and Pathos of Counterrevolutionary Action
209(4)
8 'Schopenhauer's Human Being' as Antagonist of 'Rousseau's Human Being' and of Revolution
213(4)
9 Two Intellectual Types: The 'Deferential Bum' and the 'Solitary Rebel'
217(3)
10 Schopenhauer, Wagner and 'Consecration' for the 'Battle'
220(4)
Pt 7 The 'Solitary Rebel' Becomes an 'Enlightener'
224(49)
1 The Griinderjahre, Nietzsche's Disenchantment, and the Banishing of the Spectres of Greece
224(1)
2 Taking One's Distance from Germanomania and the Break with the German National Liberals
225(5)
3 Critique of Chauvinism and the Beginning of the 'Enlightenment'
230(2)
4 The Deconstruction of the Christian-Germanic Myth of Origin
232(3)
5 The Re-interpretation of the History of Germany: Condemnations and Rehabilitations
235(5)
6 Europe, Asia and (Reinterpreted) Greece
240(3)
7 Enlightenment, Judaism and the Unity of Europe
243(6)
8 Voltaire against Rousseau: Reinterpretation and Rehabilitation of the Enlightenment
249(5)
9 Nietzsche and the Anti-revolutionary Enlightenment
254(4)
10 The 'Wandering' Philosopher
258(3)
11 Nietzsche in the School of Strauss
261(7)
12 Biography, Psychology and History in the 'Enlightenment' turn
268(5)
Pt 8 From Anti-revolutionary 'Enlightenment' to the Encounter with the Great Moralists
273(23)
1 Distrust of Moral Sentiments and Delegitimisation of the Appeal to 'Social Justice'
273(6)
2 Plebeian Pressure, Moral Sentiments and 'Moral Enlightenment'
279(4)
3 The 'Saint' and the Revolutionary 'Martyr': Altruism and Narcissism
283(3)
4 History, Science and Morality
286(3)
5 Morality and Revolution
289(3)
6 Expanding the Range of Social Conflict and Encountering the Moralists: 'Good Conscience', 'Enchantment' and the 'Evil Eye'
292(4)
Pt 9 Between German National Liberalism and European Liberalism
296(28)
1 Representative Organs, Universal Suffrage and Partitocracy
296(5)
2 From the Statism of the Greek Polis to Socialism: Nietzsche, Constant and Tocqueville
301(5)
3 Political Realism and Antiquitising Utopia
306(4)
4 Nietzsche, European Liberalism and the Complaint about the Crisis of Culture
310(3)
5 The Mediocrity of the Modern World and the Spectre of European 'chinoiserie'
313(4)
6 Jews, Colonial Peoples and the Mob: Inclusion and Exclusion
317(4)
7 The Unity and the Peace of Europe and the Enduring Value of War
321(3)
Pt 10 The Poet of the 'People's Community; the 'Solitary Rebel'; the Antirevolutionary 'Enlightener' and the Theorist of 'Aristocratic Radicalism'
324(28)
1 From 'Enlightenment' Turn to Immoralist Turn
324(5)
2 Anti-socialist Laws, 'Practical Christianity' and Wilhelm I's 'Indecency'
329(3)
3 From Critique of the Social State to Critique of the 'Representative Constitution'
332(4)
4 'We Cannot Help Being Revolutionaries'
336(2)
5 The Shadow of Suspicion Falls on the Moralists
338(2)
6 Hegel and Nietzsche: Two Opposing Critiques of the Moral Worldview
340(3)
7 From Universal Guilt to the Innocence of Becoming
343(4)
8 Four Stages in Nietzsche's Development
347(5)
Pt 11 Aristocratic 'Radicalism' and the 'New Party of Life'
352(31)
1 The 'New Party of Life'
352(3)
2 'New Nobility' and 'New Slavery'
355(3)
3 Aristocratic Distinction and Social Apartheid
358(4)
4 Aristocracy, Bourgeoisie and Intellectuals
362(2)
5 From Cultural Elitism to Caesarism
364(5)
6 Feminist Movement and 'Universal Uglification'
369(3)
7 A 'New Warrior Age'
372(11)
Part 3: Nietzsche in His Time: Theory and Practice of Aristocratic Radicalism
Pt 12 Slavery in the United States and in the Colonies and the Struggle between Abolitionists and Anti-abolitionists
383(33)
1 The Chariot of Culture and Slavery
383(4)
2 Nietzsche, Slavery and the Anti-abolitionist Polemic
387(5)
3 Between Reintroduction of Classical Slavery and 'New Slavery'
392(4)
4 Labour and servitus in the Liberal Tradition
396(5)
5 The American Civil War, the Debate on the Role of Labour and the Special Nature of Germany
401(4)
6 Otium and Labour: Freedom and Slavery of the Ancients and the Moderns
405(4)
7 Marx, Nietzsche and 'Extra Work'
409(2)
8 Race of Masters and Race of Servants: Boulainvilliers, Gobineau, Nietzsche
411(5)
Pt 13 Hierarchy, Great Chain of Being and Great Chain of Pain
416(15)
1 The Chariot of Culture and Compassion for the Slaves
416(4)
2 The Chariot of Culture and the Resentment of the Slaves
420(2)
3 Misery of the Poor and Responsibility and Boredom of the Rich
422(6)
4 Schopenhauer and Nietzsche: Between 'Tragic' Vision of Life and Relapse into Harmonisation
428(3)
Pt 14 The 'Uneducated Masses', the 'Freethinker' and the 'Free Spirit': Critique and Meta-critique of Ideology
431(28)
1 Chains and Flowers: the Critique of Ideology between Marx and Nietzsche
431(5)
2 Ideology as Legitimation of and Challenge to the Existing Social Order
436(5)
3 Direct Violence and Form of Universality
441(3)
4 From National-Liberal Reticence to the Duplicity of Aristocratic Radicalism
444(4)
5 Religions as 'Means of Breeding and Education' in the Hands of the Ruling Classes
448(4)
6 The City, the Newspaper and the Plebeians
452(4)
7 'Free Spirits' versus 'Freethinkers'
456(3)
Pt 15 From the Critique of the French Revolution to the Critique of the Jewish-Christian Revolution
459(32)
1 Revolutionary Crisis and Acceleration of Historical Time
459(4)
2 From the French Revolution to the Reformation, from the Reformation to the Christian and Jewish 'Priestly Agitators'
463(6)
3 Christianity and Revolution
469(3)
4 Denunciation of the Revolution, Critique of 'Hope' and Critique of the Unilinear View of Time
472(4)
5 Doctrine of the Eternal Return and Liquidation of Anthropocentrism (from Judaism to the French Revolution)
476(6)
6 Aristocratic Radicalism and Renewed Expulsion of Judaism to Asia
482(5)
7 The Struggle against the Jewish-Christian Tradition and the Reconquest of the West
487(4)
Pt 16 The Long Cycle of Revolution and the Curse of Nihilism
491(29)
1 Three Waves of 'Nihilism'
491(3)
2 'Total Revolution' and Political, 'Metaphysical' and 'Poetic' Nihilism
494(4)
3 Possible Attitudes towards Nihilism
498(2)
4 Nihilistic Rebelliousness as Critique and Meta-critique
500(4)
5 Unease, Charm and the Curse of Nihilism in Nietzsche
504(4)
6 Total Revolution, Attack on the 'Great Economy of the Whole' and Nihilism
508(3)
7 Total Negation, Nihilism and Madness
511(3)
8 A Polemical Category
514(4)
9 At the Source of Nihilism: Ruling Classes or Subaltern Classes?
518(2)
Pt 17 The Late Nietzsche and the Longed-for Coup against the 'Social Monarchy' of Wilhelm it and Stocker
520(31)
1 Germany as a Hotbed of Revolutionary Contagion
520(6)
2 Between Friedrich in and Wilhelm II
526(4)
3 The Emancipation of the 'Black Domestic Slaves' and Wilhelm the 'Brown Idiot'
530(3)
4 The 'Social Monarchy' of Stocker and Wilhelm II and the Counterrevolution Hoped for by Bismarck
533(5)
5 'Anti-German League' and Coup against Wilhelm II
538(5)
6 Big Jewish Capital, Prussian 'Aristocratic Officers' and Eugenic Cross-breeding
543(3)
7 'Aristocratic Radicalism' and the Party of Friedrich III
546(5)
Pt 18 'Anti-Anti-Semitism' and the Extension to Christians and 'Anti-Semites' of the Anti-socialist Laws
551(31)
1 Anti-Jewish Polemic of the Christians and Anti-Christian Polemic of the Jews
551(5)
2 Stocker and Disraeli: the Linking of Inclusion and Exclusion between Germany and Britain
556(2)
3 Germany, France, Russia and the Jews
558(3)
4 Nietzsche and the Three Figures of Judaism
561(5)
5 Zarathustra, the Applause of the Anti-Semites, and Nietzsche's Indignation
566(3)
6 Zarathustra, the Ape and Duhring
569(3)
7 The 'Jewish Question' as 'Social Question' (Duhring) or the 'Social Question' as 'Jewish Question' (Nietzsche)
572(2)
8 Feudal Anti-Semitism, 'Anti-capitalist' Anti-Semitism and 'Feudal Socialism'
574(4)
9 Denunciation of Anticapitalist Anti-Semitism and Settlement of Accounts with the Socialists, the Christian-Socials and Subversives Generally
578(4)
Pt 19 'New Party of Life, Eugenics and Annihilation of Millions of Deformed'
582(25)
1 Naturalisation of the Struggle and the Arrival at Eugenics
582(3)
2 Optimism/Pessimism; Being/Becoming, Reason/Art; Historical Consciousness/Supra-Historical Myth; Sickness/Health
585(5)
3 Birth Control, 'Castration' of the Malformed and Other Eugenic Measures
590(2)
4 'Free Death', 'Active Nihilism' and 'Nihilism of the Deed'
592(3)
5 From the 'Elimination' of Beggars to the 'Annihilation' of the Malformed
595(5)
6 Eugenics, Utopia and Dystopia
600(7)
Part 4: Beyond 'Metaphor' and 'Anticipation': Nietzsche in Comparative Perspective
Pt 20 'Metaphor', 'Anticipation' and 'Translatability of Languages'
607(36)
1 'Metaphor' as Suppression and the Short Cut of 'Anticipation'
607(4)
2 Ideological Nuremberg, Principle of to quoque and Myth of the German Sonderweg
611(4)
3 'Untimeliness' and Aristocratic Gesture of Distinction
615(7)
4 The 'Great Economy of the Whole' and the Costs of Compassion
622(4)
5 Sociology and Psychopathology of the Intellectual Layers
626(5)
6 Revolution as Sickness, Degeneration and decadence
631(5)
7 From the Innocence of Institutions to the 'Innocence of Becoming'
636(3)
8 From Dismal Science to 'Gay Science'
639(4)
Pt 21 Politics and Epistemology Between Liberalism and Aristocratic Radicalism
643(29)
1 Epistemology, Defence of the Individual and Critique of Revolution
643(3)
2 The Nominalist Polemic and the Nietzschean Critique of Liberal Inconsistency
646(3)
3 Schopenhauer's Oscillation between Nominalism and Realism and Nietzsche's Break
649(3)
4 From Nominalism to Perspectivism
652(4)
5 'Plebeianism' of Science, Perspectivism and Will to Power
656(4)
6 Three Political Projects, Three Epistemological Platforms: Mill, Lenin, Nietzsche
660(3)
7 Perspectivism, Critique of Human Rights and Dissolution of the Subject
663(4)
8 The Dissolution of the Subject in Nietzsche and European Culture
667(5)
Pt 22 Otium et bellum: Aristocratic Distinction and the Struggle against Democracy
672(20)
1 'Aristocratic Radicalism' and 'Great Conservative Reaction': Prussia, Russia and America
672(6)
2 Aristocratic 'Distinction' between the Late Eighteenth Century and the Late Nineteenth Century: Sieyes versus Nietzsche
678(4)
3 Ancien regime and the Military Role of the Aristocracy
682(5)
4 Otium et bellum, 'War and Art'
687(2)
5 The Warrior and the Soldier, War and Revolution
689(3)
Pt 23 Social Darwinism, Eugenics and Colonial Massacres
692(19)
1 Selection and 'Counter-selection'
692(4)
2 Between Eugenics and Genocide: The West in the Late Nineteenth Century
696(3)
3 Social Conflict, Colonial Expansion, Critique of Compassion and Condemnation of Christianity
699(4)
4 Christianity, Socialism and 'Free Spirits': The Reversal of the Alliances
703(8)
Part 5: Nietzsche and the Aristocratic Reaction in Two Historical Epochs
Pt 24 Philosophers, Historians and Sociologists: The Conflict of Interpretations
711(35)
1 Elisabeth's 'Conspiracy'
711(5)
2 Nietzsche Interpretation before The Will to Power: Critique from the 'Left'
716(4)
3 The Nietzsche Interpretation before The Will to Power: Applause from the 'Right'
720(3)
4 From Elisabeth's 'Proto-Nazism' to Lukacs "Objective Convergence" with the Nazi Ideologues
723(3)
5 Historical Reconstruction, Nietzsche's 'Self-Misunderstanding' and the Right to 'Deformation' on the Part of the Interpreter
726(8)
6 Philosophers and Historians or Anti-political pathos as Medicine and Sickness
734(4)
7 A Selective Hermeneutics of Innocence: Nietzsche and Wagner
738(5)
8 Gobineau and Chamberlain in Light of the Hermeneutics of Innocence
743(3)
Pt 25 Aristocratic Radicalism, Pan-European Elite and Anti-Semitism
746(23)
1 Britain and 'the Way to Distinction'
746(2)
2 European Decadence and Germany's 'Backwardness'
748(5)
3 Permanent Celebration of the German 'Essence' and Wagner's Exclusion from Authentic Germany
753(5)
4 Critique of the Second Reich and Aristocratic Reaction
758(2)
5 Horizontal and Transversal Racialisation
760(3)
6 Pan-European Elite and Co-optation of Big Jewish Capital
763(2)
7 Aryan Mythology, Old and New Testament
765(4)
Pt 26 Culture in Search of Its Slaves: From the Late Nineteenth Century Anti-democratic Reaction to Nazism
769(22)
1 Ideological Processes and Historical Time
769(5)
2 The Pathos of Europe from the Aristocratic Reaction to Nazism
774(2)
3 The Greco-Germanic Myth of Origin from the Second to the Third Reich
776(4)
4 Total War, the Sacred Patriotic Union and the Crisis of Transversal Racism
780(2)
5 Persistence of Aristocratic Reaction and Transversal Racialisation
782(4)
6 From Boulainvilliers's Negation of the Idea of 'Nation' to Imperialist Chauvinism
786(2)
7 Division of Labour, Worker chinoiserie and Racial Slavery
788(3)
Pt 27 Transformations of Aryan Mythology, Condemnation of the Revolutionary Conspiracy and the Formation of Anti-Semitism
791(36)
1 In Search of the True Aryan and Anti-Christian West
791(4)
2 The Jews as a Chandala People and as a Priestly People
795(3)
3 Revolution as Plot and the Role of Jewish Priests
798(4)
4 Critique of Christianity, 'Jewish Nietzscheanism' and Nietzsche's Contribution to the Theory of the Jewish Conspiracy
802(2)
5 From the Revolution as Conspiracy to the Jew as Revolutionary Virus
804(3)
6 Hitler and Rosenberg as Interpreters of Nietzsche and Nietzscheanism
807(6)
7 Ubermensch, Untermensch and the Nominalistic Deconstruction of the Concept of Humanity
813(3)
8 'Anti-Germanism' and 'anti-Semitism'
816(11)
Part 6: In Nietzsche's Philosophical Laboratory
Pt 28 A Philosopher totes politicus
827(34)
1 The Unity of Nietzsche's Thought
827(4)
2 Nietzsche and the Historians
831(6)
3 Continuity and Discontinuity: Genius, Free Spirits, Rank-Ordering and Overman
837(4)
4 Continuity and Discontinuity: The 'Enlightenment' from Pilate to the ancien regime
841(5)
5 Continuity and Discontinuity: From the Neutralisation of the Theodicy of Suffering to the Celebration of the Theodicy of Happiness
846(3)
6 The Philosopher, the Brahmin and the 'New Party of Life'
849(4)
7 'Linguistic Self-Discipline' contra 'Anarchy' and 'Linguistic Raggedness [ Sprachverlumpung]'
853(4)
8 Aphorism, Essay and System
857(4)
Pt 29 How to Challenge Two Millennia of History - Anti-dogmatism, and Dogmatism of Aristocratic Radicalism
861(45)
1 Philosophiafacta est quae philologiafrit
861(3)
2 Interpretation of the 'Text of Nature' and of the History and Problematisation of the 'Obvious'
864(2)
3 The Philologist-Philosopher and the View from outside and above
866(6)
4 The Metacritical View
872(2)
5 Comparatistics - the Striving for Totality and the Translatability of Languages
874(4)
6 'Reverse Syllogism' and the View from inside
878(4)
7 'There Are No Facts, Only Interpretations': Along with the 'Fact', the 'Text' Disappears
882(2)
8 Sympathetic Empathy and the Elimination of Conceptual Mediation
884(3)
9 How to Orientate Oneself among the Interpretations: From Psychology to Physio-psychology
887(3)
10 Two Radically Different Types of Mask
890(3)
11 Psychology and Ethnology of Worldviews
893(2)
12 Reappearance of the 'Text' and Its Transformation into a 'Fact'
895(4)
13 'Reverse Syllogism'; 'Soul Atomism' and Omnipresence of the Will to Power
899(2)
14 'Sickness', 'Bad Faith' and the Impossibility of Self-Reflection
901(5)
Pt 30 From Suprahistorical Myth to the Opening of New Perspectives for Historical Research
906(21)
1 Counterrevolutionary Hatred and the Highlighting of 'Reactionary' Aspects of the Revolutionary Process
906(6)
2 Radicalisation of Historical Consciousness and longue duree
912(1)
3 'Struggle of Estates and Classes' and Interpretation of the Religious Phenomenon
913(3)
4 Expanding the Range of Social Conflict and the Role of Psychology
916(2)
5 Women, Feelings and Subversion
918(3)
6 A Feminine Profile of the History of Subversion
921(6)
Part 7: Nietzsche and Us - Radicality and Demystifying Potential of the Reactionary Project
Pt 31 The Radical Aristocrat and the Great Moralist
927(22)
1 Glorification of Slavery and Denunciation of the Fragmentation and Acrisia of Intellectual Labour
927(4)
2 Contempt for Democracy and Denunciation of the 'Nationalisation of the Masses'
931(2)
3 Elitism and Construction of Individual Personality
933(5)
4 Zarathustra between Didactic Poem of the Free Spirit and Catechism of Aristocratic Radicalism
938(5)
5 Eros and Polemos: Heine and Nietzsche
943(6)
Pt 32 Crisis of the Western Myth of Origin and of Imperial Universalism
949(15)
1 The Glorification of Slavery and the Denunciation of the Idea of Mission
949(2)
2 A Critique ante litteram of 'Humanitarian War' and the 'Imperialism of Human Rights'
951(3)
3 The Crisis of the 'Jewish-Christian-Greek-Western' Myth of Origin
954(2)
4 Denunciation of Revolution and Flight from the West
956(3)
5 Denunciation of the Orientalising Christian Revolution and the Final Crisis of Eurocentrism
959(5)
Pt 33 Individualism and Holism, Inclusion and Exclusion: The Liberal Tradition, Nietzsche and the History of the West
964(27)
1 Individualism and Anti-individualism from the Liberal Tradition to Nietzsche
964(4)
2 The Individual as 'Collective Concept'
968(3)
3 'Possessive Individualism', 'Aristocratic Individualism' and Anthropological Nominalism
971(2)
4 Anthropological Nominalism and Holism from the Liberal Tradition to Nietzsche
973(4)
5 Individualism as 'Grand Narrative' and Social Engineering
977(5)
6 Construction of General Concepts and Plebeian Social Engineering
982(2)
7 The Ambiguous History of the Critique of Calculating Thought
984(3)
8 Ancient, Modern and Postmodern
987(4)
Appendix 1: How One Constructs Nietzsche's Innocence: Publishers, Translators, Interpreters 991(9)
Appendix 2: Nietzsche's Spectacles and Umbrella: An Answer to My Critics 1000(11)
Abbreviations Used in Citing Nietzsche's Writings 1011(4)
Bibliography 1015(35)
Index 1050
Domenico Losurdo (19412018) was an Italian Marxist philosopher and historian. He was a Professor of History of Philosophy at the University of Urbino and one of the world 's leading Hegel scholars and an expert on 19th and 20th-century intellectual history. He has produced a large body of scholarly work that aims at an analysis of European, and particularly German, philosophy and political thought.



Gregor Benton is emeritus professor of Chinese history at Cardiff University. He has published many books on China and other subjects.



Harrison Fluss is a corresponding editor with Historical Materialism and a lecturer in philosophy at St. John's University and Manhattan College.