•  267
    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, James I. Porter, Jessica N. Berry, John S. Moore, 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
  •  30
    Soliciting Darkness: Pindar, Obscurity, and the Classical Tradition
    Harvard University Department of Comparative Literature. 2003.
    Hailed by Horace and Quintilian as the greatest of Greek lyric poets, Pindar has always enjoyed a privileged position in the so-called classical tradition of the West. Given the intense difficulty of the poetry, however, Pindaric interpretation has forever grappled with the perplexing dilemma that one of the most influential poets of antiquity should prove to be so dark. In discussing both poets and scholars from a broad historical span, with special emphasis on the German legacy of genius, Soli…Read more
  •  62
    Music, Madness, and the Unworking of Language
    Columbia University Press. 2008.
    In the romantic tradition, music is consistently associated with madness, either as cause or cure. Writers as diverse as Kleist, Hoffmann, and Nietzsche articulated this theme, which in fact reaches back to classical antiquity and continues to resonate in the modern imagination. What John Hamilton investigates in this study is the way literary, philosophical, and psychological treatments of music and madness challenge the limits of representation and thereby create a crisis of language. Special …Read more
  •  25
    Ecce Philologus: Nietzsche and Pindar’s Second Pythian Ode
    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. 54-69. 2004.