ABSTRACT

Nietzsche and Legal Theory is an anthology designed to provide legal and socio-legal scholars with a sense of the very wide range of projects and questions in whose pursuit Nietzsche's work can be useful. From medical ethics to criminology, from the systemic anti-Semitism of legal codes arising in Christian cultures, to the details of intellectual property debates about regulating the use of culturally significant objects, the contributors (from the fields of law, philosophy, criminology, cultural studies, and literary studies) demonstrate and enact the sort of creativity that Nietzsche associated with the "free-spirits" to whom he addressed some of his most significant work.

chapter 4|16 pages

Law’s Ignoble Compassion

chapter 5|20 pages

Aphorisms, Objects, Culture

chapter 6|24 pages

Nietzsche between Jews and Jurists

chapter 9|16 pages

Slow Reading