• O'HAGAN, T.-Rousseau
    Philosophical Books 42 (3): 207-208. 2001.
  •  15
    The Tragic Ethos and the Spirit of Music
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (3): 79-100. 2003.
  •  11
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The Politics of the Ordinary
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2002.
    In this book, Rousseau is understood as a theorist of the common person. For Strong, Rousseau resonates with Kant, Hegel, and Marx, but he is more modern like Emerson, Nietzsche, Eittegenstein, and Heidegger. Rousseau's democratic individual is an ordinary self, paradoxically multiple and not singular. In the course of exploring this contention, Strong examines Rousseau's fear of authorship , his understanding of the human, his attempt to overcome the scandal that relativism posed for politics, …Read more
  •  34
    Review of Stefan elbe, Europe: A Nietzschean Perspective (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (3). 2004.
  •  42
    Glory and the Law in Hobbes
    European Journal of Political Theory 16 (1): 61-76. 2017.
    A central argument of the _Leviathan_ has to do with the political importance of education. Hobbes wants his book to be taught in universities and expounded much in the manner that Scripture was. Only thus will citizens realize what is in their hearts as to the nature of good political order. Glory affects this process in two ways. The pursuit of glory _by a citizen_ leads to political chaos and disorder. On the other hand, _God’s_ glory is such that one can do nothing but acquiesce to it. The H…Read more
  • Comment
    Nietzsche Studien 12 (n/a): 491. 1983.
  •  4
    Philosophy and the Politics of Cultural Revolution
    Philosophical Topics 33 (2): 227-247. 2005.
  •  45
    Nietzche: The Ethics of an Immoralist
    Philosophical Review 106 (2): 296. 1997.
    Peter Berkowitz’s book is about the “moral intention that gives birth to and governs Nietzsche’s thought”. Bracing his book by an introduction and conclusion, he divides it into two parts. The first comprises individual chapters on what Berkowitz calls Nietzsche’s “histories.” These are on the ethics of history, the ethics of art, the ethics of morality and the ethics of religion.
  •  31
    Book Review:Justice and Interpretation. Georgia Warnke (review)
    Ethics 105 (3): 676-. 1995.
  •  9
    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.
  •  35
    Interpretations of Nietzsche, particularly about politics, cover an exceptionally wide range. Additionally, Nietzsche is often said to commit “rhetorical excesses.” I argue and show that Nietzsche consciously crafted his published works to allow this range of interpretations, that he did this for critical purposes, and that his so-called rhetoric is there to serve this purpose.
  •  36
    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
  •  16
    From Plato through the nineteenth century, the West could draw on comprehensive political visions to guide government and society. Now, for the first time in more than two thousand years, Tracy B. Strong contends, we have lost our foundational supports. In the words of Hannah Arendt, the state of political thought in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries has left us effectively “thinking without a banister.” _Politics without Vision_ takes up the thought of seven influential thinkers, each of…Read more
  •  17
    The Concept of the Political: Expanded Edition
    with Carl Schmitt and Leo Strauss
    University of Chicago Press. 2007.
    In this, his most influential work, legal theorist and political philosopher Carl Schmitt argues that liberalism’s basis in individual rights cannot provide a reasonable justification for sacrificing oneself for the state—a critique as cogent today as when it first appeared. George Schwab’s introduction to his translation of the 1932 German edition highlights Schmitt’s intellectual journey through the turbulent period of German history leading to the Hitlerian one-party state. In addition to ana…Read more
  •  21
    Psychoanalysis as a Vocation
    Political Theory 12 (1): 51-79. 1984.
    The new development for our time cannot be political, for politics is the relationship between the community and the representative individual. But in out time, the individual is becoming far too reflective to be satisfied with being merely represented. Søren Kierkegaard, Journals, 1847
  •  16
    Nietzsche's New Seas: Explorations in Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Politics (edited book)
    with Michael Allen Gillespie
    University of Chicago Press. 1988.
    _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
  •  39
    Nietzsche and the Song in the Self
    New Nietzsche Studies 1 (1-2): 1-14. 1996.
  •  67
  •  34
    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...
  •  18
    Philosophy and the Politics of Cultural Revolution
    Philosophical Topics 33 (2): 227-247. 2005.
  •  9
    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.
  •  27
    On Sarah Kofman
    New Nietzsche Studies 7 (3-4): 4-6. 2007.