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Full-Text Articles in German Language and Literature

"Thus Spoke Zarathustra" Or Nietzsche And Hermeneutics In Gadamer, Lyotard, And Vattimo, Babette Babich Jul 2010

"Thus Spoke Zarathustra" Or Nietzsche And Hermeneutics In Gadamer, Lyotard, And Vattimo, Babette Babich

Articles and Chapters in Academic Book Collections

Apart from reading Nietzsche's words on his characterization as an educator in suspicion with some suspicion, what does Nietzsche offer hermeneutics? This essay takes up this question by talking about the politics of interpretation, hermeneutics, and genealogy. In the process, we can address Lyotard's enthusiastic fealty to technology and offer yet once more requiem for the postmodern, understood here through (and hence contra) Lyotard as the simulacrum of communication that is the internet.


Le Sort Du Nachlass : Le Problème De L’Œuvre Posthume, Babette Babich Nov 2009

Le Sort Du Nachlass : Le Problème De L’Œuvre Posthume, Babette Babich

Articles and Chapters in Academic Book Collections

Discussion of Heidegger's Nachlass as composed in the wake of his editorial experience working on the edition of Nietzsche's works. Issues explored include the role of the editor (or editors) in the work of an author (reception, legitimation, etc.) Features a discussion of the distinctive aspects of the different language versions of Nietzsche's Will to Power first in German, then in French, then in English. Text is in French.

Please use this citation:

Babette Babich, «Le sort du Nachlass : le problème de l’œuvre posthume», in : Pascale Catherine Hummel, ed., Mélivres / Misbooks. Études sur l’envers et les travers …


Nietzsche’S “Gay” Science, Babette Babich Jan 2006

Nietzsche’S “Gay” Science, Babette Babich

Articles and Chapters in Academic Book Collections

Offers a reading of the allusion to the 'Provencal' in Nietzsche’s The Gay Science, including the troubadour’s art (or 'technic') of poetic song, an art at once secret, anonymous and thus nonsubjective, but also including logical disputation, for which it is the model, and comprising, perhaps above all, the important ideal of action (and pathos) at a distance: l’amour lointain. But beyond the Provençal character and atmosphere of the troubadour, Nietzsche’s conception of a joyful science, Nietzsche's 'gay' science also adumbrates a critique of science understood as the collective ideal of scholarship, and including classical philology as much as logic, …