Nietzsche, feminism, and political theory
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Bibliographic Information
Nietzsche, feminism, and political theory
Allen & Unwin, 1993
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Displays some of the achievements and suggests some possible future gains, as well as risks, of the favourable turn towards Nietzsche within social and political thought.
Table of Contents
- Nietzsche and the pathos of distance, Rosalyn Diprose
- Nietzsche, woman and political theory, Keith Ansell-Pearson
- Nietzsche and the body, Elizabeth Grosz
- not drowning, sailing - women and the artist's craft in Nietzsche, Cathryn Vasseleu
- "Speaking of Immemorial Waters" - Irigaray with Nietzsche, Frances Oppel
- "Das Weib an Sich" - the slave revolt in epistemology, Daniel W. Conway
- ressentiment and power, Marion Tapper
- politics and power in Hobbes and Nietzsche, Paul Patton
- "Is it not remarkable that Nietzsche...should have hated Rousseau?"
- Woman, femininity - distancing Nietzsche from Rousseau, Penelope Deutscher
- the return of Nietzsche and Marx, Howard Caygill
- child of the English genealogist - Nietzsche's affliation with the critical historical mode of the Enlightenment, Paul Redding
- the postmodern politicization of Nietzsche, Ted Sadler.
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