As you read this excerpt about Nietzsche's life, consider how Nietzsche's rejection of traditional values reflected existential concerns. How is Nietzsche similar to, yet different from, the figures you have studied so far in this course?
Politics
During
the First World War and after 1945, many regarded Nietzsche as having
helped to cause the German militarism. Nietzsche was popular in Germany
in the 1890s. Many Germans read Thus Spake Zarathustra and were
influenced by Nietzsche's appeal of unlimited individualism and the
development of a personality. The enormous popularity of Nietzsche led
to the Subversion debate in German politics in 1894-1895. Conservatives
wanted to ban the work of Nietzsche. Nietzsche influenced the
Social-democratic revisionists, anarchists, feminists and the left-wing
German youth movement.
Nietzsche
became popular among National Socialists during the interbellum who
appropriated fragments of his work, notably Alfred Bäumler in his
reading of The Will to Power. During Nazi leadership, his work was
widely studied in German schools and universities. Nazi Germany often
viewed Nietzsche as one of their "founding fathers." They incorporated
much of his ideology and thoughts about power into their own political
philosophy (without consideration to its contextual meaning). Although
there exists some significant differences between Nietzsche and Nazism,
his ideas of power, weakness, women, and religion became axioms of Nazi
society. The wide popularity of Nietzsche among Nazis was due partly to
Nietzsche's sister, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, a Nazi sympathizer who
edited much of Nietzsche's works.
It
is worth noting that Nietzsche's thought largely stands opposed to
Nazism. In particular, Nietzsche despised anti-Semitism (which partially
led to his falling out with composer Richard Wagner) and nationalism.
He took a dim view of German culture as it was in his time, and derided
both the state and populism. As the joke goes: "Nietzsche detested
Nationalism, Socialism, Germans and mass movements, so naturally he was
adopted as the intellectual mascot of the National Socialist German
Workers' Party." He was also far from being a racist, believing that the
"vigor" of any population could only be increased by mixing with
others. In The Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche says, "...the concept of
'pure blood' is the opposite of a harmless concept."
As
for the idea of the "blond beast," Walter Kaufmann has this to say in
The Will to Power: "The 'blond beast' is not a racial concept and does
not refer to the 'Nordic race' of which the Nazis later made so much.
Nietzsche specifically refers to Arabs and Japanese, Romans and Greeks,
no less than ancient Teutonic tribes when he first introduces the
term... and the 'blondness' obviously refers to the beast, the lion,
rather than the kind of man."
While
some of his writings on "the Jewish question" were critical of the
Jewish population in Europe, he also praised the strength of the Jewish
people, and this criticism was equally, if not more strongly, applied to
the English, the Germans, and the rest of Europe. He also valorized
strong leadership, and it was this last tendency that the Nazis took up.
While
his use by the Nazis was inaccurate, it should not be supposed that he
was strongly liberal either. One of the things that he seems to have
detested the most about Christianity was its emphasis on pity and how
this leads to the elevation of the weak-minded. Nietzsche believed that
it was wrong to deprive people of their pain, because it was this very
pain that stirred them to improve themselves, to grow and become
stronger. It would overstate the matter to say that he disbelieved in
helping people; but he was persuaded that much Christian pity robbed
people of necessary painful life experiences, and robbing a person of
his necessary pain, for Nietzsche, was wrong. He once noted in his Ecce
Homo: "pain is not an objection to life."
Nietzsche
often referred to the common people who participated in mass movements
and shared a common mass psychology as "the rabble," and "the herd." He
valued individualism above all else. While he had a dislike of the state
in general, he also spoke negatively of anarchists and made it clear
that only certain individuals should attempt to break away from the herd
mentality. This theme is common throughout Thus Spake Zarathustra.
Nietzsche's
politics are discernible through his writings, but are difficult to
access directly since he eschewed any political affiliation or label.
There are some liberal tendencies in his beliefs, such as his distrust
of strong punishment for criminals and even a criticism of the death
penalty can be found in his early work. However, Nietzsche had much
disdain for liberalism, and spent much of his writing contesting the
thoughts of Immanuel Kant. Nietzsche believed that "Democracy has in all
ages been the form under which organizing strength has perished," that
"Liberalism [is] the transformation of mankind into cattle," and that
"Modern democracy is the historic form of decay of the state"(The
Antichrist).
Ironically,
since World War II, Nietzsche's influence has generally been clustered
on the political left, particularly in France by way of
post-structuralist thought (Gilles Deleuze and Pierre Klossowski are
often credited for writing the earliest monographs to draw new attention
to his work, and a 1972 conference at Cérisy-la-Salle is similarly
regarded as the most important event in France for a generation's
reception of Nietzsche). However, in the United States, Nietzsche
appears to have exercised some influence upon certain conservative
academics (for example, Leo Strauss and Allan Bloom).