•  22
    Part 2 of this essay focuses on a recessed but palpable thread that runs through the entirety of Erich Auerbach’s philology, though most strikingly in his two most celebrated writings, “Figura” (1938) and Mimesis (1946). All his writings speak directly to his own historical circumstances. But they do so by underscoring the ineffaceable Jewish inheritances of Western literature and culture. In the process, his writings also do something else: they model Jewish survival. By dwelling on the lingeri…Read more
  •  17
  •  19
    The first part of an examination of Erich Auerbach’s philological method in connection with his Jewish background. The article takes issue with quite recent Christianizing approaches to Auerbach, including those that attempt to demonstrate how Catholic and Protestant theology influenced his writings, in particular that of Rudolf Bultmann, his contemporary at Marburg. Philology made Jewish names a style and approach to literary history that counters antisemitism and anti-Judaism. Auerbach is an e…Read more
  •  266
    Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical Tradition
    with Paul Bishop, Alan Cardew, Albert Henrichs, Anthony K. Jensen, Barry Stocker, Benjamin Biebuyck, Burkhard Meyer-Sickendiek, Christian Emden, Danny Praet, David F. Horkott, David M. A. Campbell, David N. McNeill, Dirk T. D. Held, Dylan Jaggard, Fiona Jenkins, Friedrich Ulfers, Herman Siemens, Isabelle Vanden Poel, Jessica N. Berry, John S. Moore, John T. Hamilton, Laurence Lampert, Mark Daniel Cohen, Mark Hammond, Martin A. Ruehl, Neville Morley, Nicholas Martin, Peter Yates, R. Bracht Branham, R. O. Elveton, Simon Gillham, Thomas A. Meyer, and Thomas Brobjer
    Boydell & Brewer. 2004.
    Wide-ranging essays making up the first major study of Nietzsche and the classical tradition in a quarter of a century. This volume collects a wide-ranging set of essays examining Friedrich Nietzsche's engagement with antiquity in all its aspects. It investigates Nietzsche's reaction and response to the concept of "classicism," with particular reference to his work on Greek culture as a philologist in Basel and later as a philosopher of modernity, and to his reception of German classicism in all…Read more
  •  11
    Index
    with Jure Simoniti, Gregor Kroupa, Miran Božovič, Bojana Jovićević, Robert B. Pippin, Paul Redding, Slavoj Žižek, Sebastian Rödl, Isabelle Thomas-Fogiel, Paul Guyer, Jela Krečič, and Mladen Dolar
    In Jure Simoniti & Gregor Kroupa (eds.), Ideas and Idealism in Philosophy, De Gruyter. pp. 283-286. 2022.
  •  1
    Nietzsche and Literary Studies (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2024.
  •  75
    Life Cycles beyond the Human: Biomass and Biorhythms in Heraclitus
    Classical Antiquity 43 (1): 50-96. 2024.
    All parts of Heraclitus’ cosmos are simultaneously living and dying. Its constituent stuffs (“biomasses”) cycle endlessly through physical changes in sweeping patterns (“biorhythms”) that are reflected in the dynamic rhythms of Heraclitus’ own thought and language. These natural processes are best examined at a more-than-human level that exceeds individuation, stable identity, rational comprehension, and linguistic capture. B62 (“mortals immortals”), one of Heraclitus’ most perplexing fragments,…Read more
  •  31
    Nietzsche, Homer, and the Classical Tradition
    In Paul Bishop, Alan Cardew, Albert Henrichs, Anthony K. Jensen, Barry Stocker, Benjamin Biebuyck, Burkhard Meyer-Sickendiek, Christian Emden, Danny Praet, David F. Horkott, David M. A. Campbell, David N. McNeill, Dirk T. D. Held, Dylan Jaggard, Fiona Jenkins, Friedrich Ulfers, Herman Siemens, Isabelle Vanden Poel, James I. Porter, Jessica N. Berry, John S. Moore, John T. Hamilton, Laurence Lampert, Mark Daniel Cohen, Mark Hammond, Martin A. Ruehl, Neville Morley, Nicholas Martin, Peter Yates, R. Bracht Branham, R. O. Elveton, Simon Gillham, Thomas A. Meyer & Thomas Brobjer (eds.), Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical Tradition, Boydell & Brewer. pp. 6-26. 2004.
  •  48
    Nietzsche and “The Problem of Socrates”
    In Sara Ahbel-Rappe & Rachana Kamtekar (eds.), A Companion to Socrates, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.
    This chapter contains sections titled: A Divided Socrates: Ambiguity or Ambivalence? Socratic Constructions Socratic Voices Thematizations.
  •  55
    Nietzsche's Theory of the Will to Power
    In Keith Ansell Pearson (ed.), A Companion to Nietzsche, Wiley-blackwell. 2006-01-01.
    This chapter contains sections titled: “Claims to Power” The Rhetoric of the Will to Power “The world viewed from inside”: Nietzsche's Later Atomism “The Logic of Feeling”
  •  19
    Unconscious Agency in Nietzsche
    In Mazzino Montinari, Wolfgang Müller-Lauter, Heinz Wenzel, Günter Abel & Werner Stegmaier (eds.), 1998, De Gruyter. pp. 153-195. 1999.
  •  39
    2.6 Why Nietzsche Opposes the Creation of Values
    Nietzsche Studien 44 (1): 133-135. 2015.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Nietzsche-Studien Jahrgang: 44 Heft: 1 Seiten: 133-135
  • Is the sublime an aesthetic value?
    In I. Sluiter & Ralph Mark Rosen (eds.), Aesthetic value in classical antiquity, Brill. 2012.
  •  34
    How Ideal Is the Ancient Self?
    In Jure Simoniti & Gregor Kroupa (eds.), Ideas and Idealism in Philosophy, De Gruyter. pp. 1-26. 2022.
    Heraclitus is typically thought to have ushered in the concept of the individual self as a subject of experience that is endowed with the core attributes of singularity, integrity, mental and psychological coherence, and autonomous agency. A close look at his fragments along with some of the best nineteenthcentury readings of him (Schleiermacher, Hegel, and Nietzsche, and then the early Bruno Snell in their wake) provides evidence that such a conception of the self was alien to Heraclitus, not b…Read more
  •  49
    Living on the Edge
    Classical Antiquity 39 (2): 225-283. 2020.
    Roman Stoicism is typically read as a therapeutic philosophy that is centered around the care of the self and presented in the form of a self-help manual. Closer examination reveals a less reassuring and more challenging side to the school’s teachings, one that provokes ethical reflection at the limits of the self’s intactness and coherence. The self is less an object of inquiry than the by-product of a complex set of experiences in the face of nature and society and across any number of flashpo…Read more
  •  50
    Nietzsche, Die Griechen Und Die Philologie
    Nietzsche Studien 40 (1): 343-351. 2011.
  •  25
    Constructions of the Classical Body (edited book)
    University of Michigan Press,. 1999.
    Distinguished international scholars examine the neglected issue of the body and its status in classical antiquity.
  •  97
    The essay approaches the idea of the self as this was most often formulated in antiquity from Heraclitus to Augustine—not as the object of self-fashioning and self-care, but as an irresolvable problem that was a productive if disconcerting source of inquiry. The self is less cultivated than it is “unbounded,” less wedded to regimes of truth and discovery than it is exposed, precariously, to crises of identity and coherence in the face of a constantly changing and unfathomable world. The self on …Read more
  •  86
  •  124
    “Don't Quote Me on That!”: Wilamowitz Contra Nietzsche in 1872 and 1873
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 42 (1): 73-99. 2011.
    ABSTRACT This article examines an oddity that has gone unnoticed since Nietzsche first pointed it out to his friend and confidant Erwin Rohde in 1872—namely, that Wilamowitz, in his attack on The Birth of Tragedy, systematically misquotes Nietzsche. A large number of the quotations from The Birth of Tragedy by Wilamowitz in both installments of Zukunftsphilologie! are pseudo-quotations—whether they are off by a word or more or whether they are a collage of phrases drawn freely from Nietzsche's v…Read more
  •  113
    The seductions of Gorgias
    Classical Antiquity 12 (2): 267-299. 1993.
    From the older handbooks to the more recent scholarly literature, Gorgias's professions about his art are taken literally at their word: conjured up in all of these accounts is the image of a hearer irresistibly overwhelmed by Gorgias's apagogic and psychagogic persuasions. Gorgias's own description of his art, in effect, replaces our description of it. "His proofs... give the impression of ineluctability" . "Thus logos is almost an independent external power which forces the hearer to do its wi…Read more
  •  78
    Nietzsche's Rhetoric: Theory and Strategy
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 27 (3). 1994.
  •  65
    Nietzsche and the Philology of the Future
    Stanford University Press. 2000.
    Drawing on Nietzsche's prolific early notebooks and correspondence, this book challenges the polarized picture of Nietzsche as a philosopher who abandoned classical philology.
  •  56
    Untimely Meditations: Nietzsche's Zeitatomistik in Context
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 20 58-81. 2000.
  •  177
    Reply to Shiner
    British Journal of Aesthetics 49 (2): 171-178. 2009.
    Larry Shiner has risen to an impassioned defence against my criticisms of an iconic figure, claiming that I have ‘misrepresent[ed] Kristeller's central aim’ and therefore missed ‘the real shortcomings of Kristeller's essay’ and ‘obscure[d] substantive issues behind simplistic dichotomies’. These, and a series of disagreements over countless small details, take up the first part of his reply. He then proceeds to summarize his own book's achievements in correcting Kristeller's shortcomings. Shiner…Read more