•  95
    Politics, and Time
    New Nietzsche Studies 6 (3-4): 197-210. 2005.
  •  45
    Music, Politics, Theater, and Representation in Rousseau
    with C. N. Dugan
    In Patrick Riley (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Rousseau, Cambridge University Press. pp. 329. 2001.
  •  136
    Nations and Contexts
    European Journal of Political Theory 2 (2): 245-254. 2003.
  •  34
    Introduction: Three Forms of Ethical Pluralism
    with Richard Madsen
    In Richard Madsen & Tracy B. Strong (eds.), The Many and the One: Religious and Secular Perspectives on Ethical Pluralism in the Modern World, Princeton University Press. pp. 1-22. 2009.
  •  30
    The Self and the political order (edited book)
    New York University Press. 1991.
    From the immemorial humans have lived together in groups. What it means to be a human being has no other basis than the interactions that take place in these groups. Politics then is the shaping of the necessary fact of social interaction. This volume concerns itself with the role of the individual in this social and political order. Including selections from both classical writers such as Plato, and contemporary scholars such as George Kareb, Michael Sandel, and Donna Haraway, the work examines…Read more
  •  101
    Exile and the Demos: Leo Strauss in America
    The European Legacy 18 (6): 715-726. 2013.
    This article explores the political, as opposed to the philosophical, impact of Leo Strauss’s exile in America on his thought. After a consideration of anti-Semitism and the importance Strauss attached to being a Jew, I argue that the fact that in America he no longer wrote in his Muttersprache but in English was central to his becoming a political theorist rather than a philosopher. Whereas as a philosopher he was unable to speak to the demos, as a political theorist what he needed was a group …Read more
  •  46
    Reflections on Kissinger's On China
    Theory and Event 15 (3). forthcoming.
  •  3
    Nietzsche's Political Aesthetics
    Rivista di Estetica 26 (24): 15-36. 1986.
  •  46
  •  113
    Book Review:Justice and Interpretation. Georgia Warnke (review)
    Ethics 105 (3): 676-. 1995.
  •  97
    Heidegger, the Pólis, the Political and Gelassenheit
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 47 (2): 157-173. 2016.
    I want to learn more and more to see as beautiful what is necessary in things. (Nietzsche, The Gay Science, #370)[Heidegger's attraction to Nazism might be] internal to understanding Heidegger's wo...
  •  53
  •  69
    Philosophy and the Politics of Cultural Revolution
    Philosophical Topics 33 (2): 227-247. 2005.
  •  132
    Nietzsche and the Political: Tyranny, Tragedy, Cultural Revolution, and Democracy
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 35 (1): 48-66. 2008.
  •  66
    The Tragic Ethos and the Spirit of Music
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (3): 79-100. 2003.
  •  61
    This book examines both the personal and the political sides of Nietzsche's writings to show how his writings can expand notions of democratic politics and democratic understanding.
  •  53
    Review of Stefan elbe, Europe: A Nietzschean Perspective (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (3). 2004.
  •  64
    Book reviews (review)
    with Douglas Moggach, Louis J. Hammann, Nancy Vine Durling, Gabriel Albiac, André Mineau, Gilbert Larochelle, Henrietta Leyser, Dorothy Koenigsberger, John Collier, Gerhard Richter, Hartmut Rosenau, Margaret A. Maiumdar, Fredric S. Zuckerman, Fred S. Michael, Emily Michael, Ian Duncan, John E. Weakland, Deborah L. Madsen, David Stevenson, José Luis Nella Hernandez, David Garrioch, Howard G. Schneiderman, Terrell Carver, Tjitske Akkerman, K. Steven Vincent, Thomas M. Banchich, Richard Bosworth, Joyce S. Pedersen, Bernard Freydberg, Dieter A. Binder, Frederick Wasser, Bernard Zelechow, Hrvoje Lorkovic, Krishan Kumar, Kate Ince, Laurie M. Johnson Bagby, James R. Watson, Vitezslav Vellmský, William R. Everdell, Reinhard Heinisch, Hermine W. Williams, Nicholas Mirzoeff, Keith Bradley, Tracey Rowland, David W. Lovell, and A. S. Gratwick
    The European Legacy 1 (6): 1969-2032. 1996.
    Etudes hégéliennes: Raison et décision. Bernard Bourgeois (Presses Universitaires de France, Paris, Questions, 1992). 404 pp. FF 198.00 paper. Name, Hero, Icon: Semiotics of Nationalism through Heroic Biography. Anna Makolkin (Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1992), 264 pp. DM 148 cloth. A History of Women in the West: II. Silences of the Middle Ages. Edited by Christiane Klapisch‐Zuber (Cambridge, Mass. and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1992). Examination of Phar…Read more
  •  122
    On Sarah Kofman
    New Nietzsche Studies 7 (3-4): 4-6. 2007.
  •  27
    A warning that politics has a particular validity, but that this validity is challenged by much that is characteristic of modernity. It demonstrates that humans are tempted to move away from politics, and outlines the costs and benefits of retaining the political as a realm of human activity.
  •  107
    Editorial
    Political Theory 19 (1): 5-6. 1991.
  •  158
    Philosophy of the Morning: Nietzsche and the Politics of Transfiguration
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 39 (1): 51-65. 2010.
    ABSTRACT Nietzsche’s life project remains constant throughout his life: it is the project of transformation or transfiguration. He formulates this as the necessity of dealing with the way that one’s past (be it that of an individual, or a society, or the species) shapes one’s present. The paradigm for this transformation is first to be found in The Birth of Tragedy, but it reappears in various guises in all of his work. I argue that Nietzsche’s writing is itself designed so as to make possible s…Read more
  •  47
    Nietzsche's New Seas: Explorations in Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Politics (edited book)
    with Michael Allen Gillespie
    University Of Chicago Press. 1991.
    _Nietzsche's New Seas_ makes available for the first time in English a representative sample of the best recent Nietzsche scholarship from Germany, France, and the United States. Michael Allen Gillespie and Tracy B. Strong have brought together scholars from a variety of disciplines—philosophy, history, literary criticism, and musicology—and from schools of thought that differ both methodologically and ideologically. The contributors—Karsten Harries, Robert Pippin, Eugen Fink, Hans-Georg Gadamer…Read more