Home Jewish Nietzscheanism
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Jewish Nietzscheanism

  • Robert C. Holub EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: August 20, 2021

Abstract

Jewish Nietzscheans have traditionally shied away from any detailed examination of Nietzsche’s comments on contemporary Jewry or the Jewish religion. Scholars who have examined Jewish Nietzscheans have therefore sought to connect Nietzsche with some dimension of Jewish thought through similarities in views between Nietzsche and the Jewish intellectuals who were purportedly influenced by him. The two books under consideration in this essay strain to find solid connections between Nietzsche’s philosophy and the writings of eminent Jewish writers. Daniel Rynhold and Michael Harris examine how selected Nietzschean concepts can also be found in the work of the noted Jewish thinker Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik. David Ohana, by contrast, examines a variety of Jewish writers who at some point exhibited an enthusiasm for Nietzsche, ranging from Hebrew scholars and translators to German-Jewish intellectuals. Both books suffer from many of the shortcomings of general Nietzschean influence studies: there is often no sound philological evidence of influence, or the “connection” is so general that it is difficult to see Nietzsche as the source of influence, or the alleged influence was of short duration, and it is difficult to understand what remains Nietzschean in the individual influenced.

Bibliography

Golomb, Jacob: Nietzsche and Zion, Ithaca, NY 200410.7591/9781501727214Search in Google Scholar

Holub, Robert C.: “Nietzsche: Socialist, Anarchist, Feminist”, in Lynne Tatlock / Matt Erlin (eds.), German Culture in Nineteenth-Century America: Reception, Adaptation, Transformation, Rochester, NY 2005, 129–4910.1515/9781571136657-010Search in Google Scholar

Overbeck, Franz: Erinnerungen an Friedrich Nietzsche, Berlin 2011Search in Google Scholar

Poliakov, Léon: The Aryan Myth: A History of Racist and Nationalistic Ideas in Europe, New York 1996Search in Google Scholar

Ratner-Rosenhagen, Jennifer: American Nietzsche: A History of an Icon and His Ideas, Chicago 201110.7208/chicago/9780226705842.001.0001Search in Google Scholar

Soloveitchik, Joseph B.: Halakhic Man, Philadelphia, PA 1983Search in Google Scholar

Soloveitchik, Joseph B.: The Lonely Man of Faith, New York 1965Search in Google Scholar

Stegmaier, Werner / Krochmalnik, Daniel (eds.): Jüdischer Nietzscheanismus, Berlin 200010.1515/9783110809770Search in Google Scholar

Volkov, Shulamith: Antisemitismus als kultureller Code, Munich 1990Search in Google Scholar

Published Online: 2021-08-20
Published in Print: 2021-08-18

© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Titelei
  2. Editorial
  3. Inhaltsverzeichnis
  4. Die „Magie des Extrems“ in philosophischen Neuorientierungen. Nietzsches neue extreme Problemstellungen und -lösungen und das alte Beispiel des Sokrates
  5. Burckhardt’s Silence and Nietzsche
  6. A Heretical Student in the Schopenhauerian School
  7. Nietzsche’s Heraclitean Doctrine of the Eternal Recurrence of the Same
  8. Das Bild eines „europäischen Goethe“ in Nietzsches Götzen-Dämmerung. Einige Bemerkungen
  9. Le cas Napoléon
  10. Utopien des Übergangs. Don Quixote und Zarathustra
  11. „Werde, der du bist!“. Selbsterkenntnis, Handeln und Selbstgestaltung bei Nietzsche in einem Ineditum von Georges Canguilhem
  12. Bound Sovereignty: The Origins of Moral Conscience in Nietzsche’s “Sovereign Individual”
  13. Nietzsche’s Compassion
  14. Nietzsche’s Entomology: Insect Sociality and the Concept of the Will
  15. Sources of Nietzsche’s Knowledge and Critique of Anarchism
  16. Nachweis aus Horaz, Satiren und Episteln
  17. Nachweis aus Karl Rosenkranz, Aesthetik des Hässlichen (1853)
  18. Nachweise aus Eugen Dühring, Cursus der Philosophie (1875)
  19. Nietzsche and the Aesthetics of Philosophy
  20. Nietzsche and Music
  21. Leib, Seele und Subjektivität nach Nietzsche. Internationale Perspektiven auf ein Problem im Wandel
  22. Recent Work on Nietzsche’s Moral Psychology and Ethics
  23. Recent Work on Nietzsche’s Social and Political Philosophy
  24. Jewish Nietzscheanism
  25. Siglen
  26. Stellenregister
  27. Hinweise zur Gestaltung von Manuskripten für die Nietzsche-Studien
  28. Nietzsche-Studien Style Sheet
  29. Titelseiten
  30. Editorial
  31. Abhandlungen
  32. Die „Magie des Extrems“ in philosophischen Neuorientierungen. Nietzsches neue extreme Problemstellungen und -lösungen und das alte Beispiel des Sokrates
  33. Burckhardt’s Silence and Nietzsche
  34. A Heretical Student in the Schopenhauerian School
  35. Nietzsche’s Heraclitean Doctrine of the Eternal Recurrence of the Same
  36. Das Bild eines „europäischen Goethe“ in Nietzsches Götzen-Dämmerung. Einige Bemerkungen
  37. Le cas Napoléon
  38. Utopien des Übergangs. Don Quixote und Zarathustra
  39. „Werde, der du bist!“. Selbsterkenntnis, Handeln und Selbstgestaltung bei Nietzsche in einem Ineditum von Georges Canguilhem
  40. Bound Sovereignty: The Origins of Moral Conscience in Nietzsche’s “Sovereign Individual”
  41. Nietzsche’s Compassion
  42. Nietzsche’s Entomology: Insect Sociality and the Concept of the Will
  43. Abhandlung zur Quellenforschung
  44. Sources of Nietzsche’s Knowledge and Critique of Anarchism
  45. Nachweise zur Quellenforschung
  46. NACHWEIS AUS HORAZ, SATIREN UND EPISTELN
  47. NACHWEIS AUS KARL ROSENKRANZ, AESTHETIK DES HÄSSLICHEN (1853)
  48. NACHWEISE AUS EUGEN DÜHRING, CURSUS DER PHILOSOPHIE (1875)
  49. Rezensionen
  50. Nietzsche and the Aesthetics of Philosophy
  51. Nietzsche and Music
  52. Leib, Seele und Subjektivität nach Nietzsche. Internationale Perspektiven auf ein Problem im Wandel
  53. Recent Work on Nietzsche’s Moral Psychology and Ethics
  54. Recent Work on Nietzsche’s Social and Political Philosophy
  55. Jewish Nietzscheanism
Downloaded on 5.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/nietzstu-2021-0021/html
Scroll to top button