Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil: A Reader's Guide by Christa Davis Acampora and Keith Ansell Pearson (review)

Journal of Nietzsche Studies 45 (2):210-213 (2014)
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Abstract

For many years, Anglo-American scholars paid scant attention to Nietzsche’s published works as integral wholes. Explicitly or implicitly, scholars agreed with Arthur Danto that Nietzsche’s texts had little order and coherence and so the interpreter’s task was to systematize Nietzsche’s philosophy for him by assembling ideas found throughout his corpus.1 Recently, however, there has been a significant increase in scholarship focused on Nietzsche’s published works. Not only have a number of readings of On the Genealogy of Morals been produced in the past decade,2 scholars have recently published works devoted exclusively to texts such as The Birth of Tragedy,3 Human, All Too Human,4 and The Gay Science.5 Christa ..

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Matthew Meyer
University of Scranton

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