“This is an important and highly innovative appreciation of Nietzsche which offers fresh and arresting insights into both core and neglected aspects of his philosophy. It makes central to Nietzsche’s project the thought of eternal return and provides a novel interpretation of it as the cornerstone of his political ontology. The author convincingly argues that Nietzsche’s celebrated affirmation of life needs to be translated into a political vision for humankind. Highly recommended” (Keith Ansell-Pearson, Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick).
Since the early twentieth century, scholarly debate has revolved around the status of the ‘political’ in the thought of Friedrich Nietzsche. Following Nietzsche’s call for a ‘philosopher-physician’ and his own use of the bodily language of ‘health’ and ‘illness’ as tools to diagnose the ailments of the body politic, this book is the first to offer a reconstruction of the concept of ‘political physiology’ in Nietzsche’s thought. Biswas Mellamphy presents Nietzsche’s political physiology by inter-relating three concepts not usually treated together: great politics, eternal recurrence, and the philosopher of the future. By bridging some of the interpretive gaps between the Anglo-American, German and French schools of interpretation, Nietzsche’s political physiology is presented as a politics of subjective transmutation within the context of that pervasive pathological condition of modernity called ‘nihilism’. This book charts the pathology of nihilism in Nietzsche’s thought and argues that Nietzsche’s political physiology is, first and foremost, a politics of emergent ontology.
The Three Stigmata of Friedrich Nietzsche: Political Physiology in the Age of Nihilism
For more information, see here.
Mark as favourite