Description
Book SynopsisNietzsche advocates the affirmation of earthly life as a way to counteract nihilism and asceticism. This volume takes stock of the complexities and wide-ranging perspectives that Nietzsche brings to bear on the problem of life’s becoming on earth by engaging various interpretative paradigms reaching from existentialist to Darwinist readings of Nietzsche.
Trade Review"This exciting collection of essays challenges existing interpretations of several key moments of Nietzsche's philosophy, especially his understanding of biological life and what it means for human beings to affirm life. Individual chapters cast new light on his relationship to thinkers such as Darwin, Emerson, Empedocles, and Hegel. This immensely rich book should be read by everyone interested in contemporary Nietzsche scholarship!" -- -Paul Patton Scientia Professor of Philosophy, University of New South Wales, Australia "From his earliest work, where the philosopher's task was to 'look at science through the optic of the artist, but also to look at art through the optic of life,' to his final critiques of nihilism and the ascetic ideal for their inability to affirm or enhance life, Nietzsche's thinking never strayed from the perspective of life. But what does Nietzsche mean by 'life'? And what would it mean to affirm it? Rather than concede to the biological and evolutionary sciences the task of unlocking the secret codes of life, Vanessa Lemm brings together in this timely volume essays by an international array of leading Nietzsche scholars who examine from each of the three dominant approaches to Nietzsche interpretation-existentialist, naturalist, and poststructuralist Nietzsche's insight that the becoming of biological life is of the utmost normative significance to human beings." -- -Alan D. Schrift Grinnell College "Vanessa Lemm is one of the most original Nietzsche scholars working today and an expert on a key aspect of Nietzsche's thought: animal life. Nietzsche and the Becoming of Life presents original interpretations of Nietzsche's works, addressing his conception of life from the observation point of topics such as naturalism, evolutionary biology, bodily experience, normativity, justice, and self-experimentation. It is a much welcome addition to Nietzsche studies." -- -Federico Luisetti The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "The roster of contributors is impressive, comprising top-notch Nietzsche scholars from North and South America, as well as Europe. The seventeen papers collected here represent a diverse but coherent and complementary range of interpretive approaches, all of which focus on different aspects of Nietzsche's conception of life and related topics. A collection like this is a real boon to Nietzsche studies." -- -Peter Groff Bucknell University
Table of ContentsList of Abbreviations Acknowledgments Introduction Vanessa Lemm Part I: Contesting Nietzsche's Naturalism 1. The Optics of Science, Art, and Life Tracy B. Strong 2. Nietzsche, Nature, and Life Affirmation Lawrence J. Hatab Part II: Evolution, Teleology, and the Laws of Nature 3. Is Evolution Blind? On Nietzsche's Reception of Darwin Virginia Cano 4. Nietzsche and the Nineteenth-Century Debate on Teleology Mariana A. Cruz 5. Nietzsche's Conception of "Necessity" and Its Relation to "Laws of Nature" Herman W. Siemens Part III: Justice and the Law of Life 6. Life and Justice in Nietzsche's Conception of History Vanessa Lemm 7. Life, Injustice, and Recurrence Scott Jenkins 8. Heeding the Law of Life: Receptivity, Submission, Hospitality Daniel D. Conway Part IV: The Becoming of a New Body and Sensibility 9. Toward the Body of the Overman Debra Bergoffen 10. Nietzsche's Synaesthetic Epistemology and the Restitution of the Holistic Human Rainer J. Hanshe 11. Nietzsche's Naturalist Morality of Breeding: A Critique of Eugenics as Taming Donovan Miyasaki 12. An "Other Way of Being": The Nietzschean "Animal": Contributions to the Question of Biopolitics Monica B. Cragnolini Part V: Purification and the Freedom of Death 13. Nietzsche and the Transformation of Death Eduardo Nasser 14. Becoming and Purification: Empedocles, Zarathustra's Ubermensch, and Lucian's Tyrant Babette Babich Part VI: The Becoming of the Soul: Nomadism and Self-Experiment 15. "Falling In Love with Becoming": Remarks on Nietzsche and Emerson Dieter Thoma 16. "We Are Experiments": Nietzsche on Morality and Authenticity Keith Ansell-Pearson 17. States and Nomads: Hegel's World and Nietzsche's Earth Gary Shapiro Notes List of Contributors Index