Available Formats
Nietzsche's Death of God and Italian Philosophy
By (Author) Emilio Carlo Corriero
Translated by Vanessa Di Stefano
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
31st August 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
195
Paperback
286
Width 152mm, Height 227mm, Spine 20mm
431g
This book describes the reception of the Nietzschean Death of God within the Italian philosophical debate, an ambit traditionally concerned with emphasising the practical-political meaning of philosophical thinking. Nietzsche's abyssal announcement of the Death of God - "mein Wort fr Ideale" - highlights the necessity to rethink the connection between theory and praxis. This is particularly evident in the works of Italian thinkers such as Vattimo, Cacciari, Colli, Masini e Severino, who in large part have read Nietzsche's philosophy through the philosophical filter of Marxian culture, trying to show the emancipatory charge present in Nietzsche's work and the necessity to rethink the boundaries of the political, over the limits of political theology. Emilio Carlo Corriero demonstrates how the reception of Nietzsche's pronouncement, with its theoretical consequences, reveals the specific character of Italian philosophy, its eclectic attitude and its attention to the practical-political meaning of philosophical thought, but also its constant reflection on the concept of history and the origin of Being.
Far from being a pure and simple annotated bibliography of Italian studies of Nietzsche in recent decades, the work of Corriero has the breadth of a true and complete panorama of a large part of recent Italian philosophy, and can contribute significantly to the theoretical debate on issues and possibilities that are still open for discussion. -- Gianni Vattimo, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Turin
Emilio Carlo Corriero is an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University of Torino and Research Fellow at the Istituto Italiano per gli Studi Filosofici in Naples. Translated by Vanessa di Stefano MA.