ABSTRACT

The decisive influence of Friedrich Nietzsche on H.L. Mencken is readily acknowledged in the vast literature on the great American journalist and social critic. However, Mencken's 1908 study of the philosopher has been relegated to footnote status by Mencken's critics and biographers and has been largely ignored by Nietzsche scholars. There are good reasons for reversing this judgment. Mencken's work was one of the first comprehensive and sympathetic treatments of Nietzsche's thought in the English language. It is a provocative engagement with the German philosopher's complex and elusive ideas, enhanced by a style that reverberates with a verve and dynamism approaching Nietzsche's own.

Mencken presents a view of Nietzsche that elucidates the latter's complex and contentious form of the "gospel of individualism" while evincing a keen appreciation of his unrivalled capacity for critical analysis. The historical scope of Nietzsche's thought is fully evident in Mencken's analysis as is its application to modern societies and politics. In tracing the biographical and intellectual impetus for Nietzsche's relentless attacks on conventional moralities and established modes of thought, Mencken discerned both an ideal and a method for grappling with social and cultural issues that remain salient in our own time.

part |59 pages

Nietzsche the Man

chapter I|13 pages

Friedrich Nietzsche

chapter II|11 pages

The Beginnings of the Philosopher

chapter III|13 pages

Blazing a New Path

chapter IV|10 pages

The Prophet of the Superman

chapter V|10 pages

The Philosopher and the Man

part |191 pages

Nietzsche The Philosopher

chapter I|11 pages

Dionysus Versus Apollo

chapter II|14 pages

The Origin of Morality

chapter III|12 pages

Beyond Good and Evil

chapter IV|17 pages

The Superman

chapter V|9 pages

Eternal Recurrence

chapter VI|21 pages

Christianity

chapter VII|15 pages

Truth

chapter VIII|12 pages

Civilization

chapter IX|18 pages

Women And Marriage

chapter X|16 pages

Government

chapter XI|8 pages

Crime And Punishment

chapter XII|10 pages

Education

chapter XIII|16 pages

Sundry ideas

chapter XIV|10 pages

Nietzsche VS. Wagner

part |43 pages

Nietzsche The Prophet

chapter I|13 pages

Nietzsche’s Origins

chapter II|22 pages

Nietzsche And His Critics

chapter |6 pages

How To Study Nietzsche