Lexington Books
Pages: 136
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-7936-0392-0 • Hardback • December 2019 • $104.00 • (£80.00)
978-1-7936-0394-4 • Paperback • April 2023 • $39.99 • (£30.00)
978-1-7936-0393-7 • eBook • December 2019 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Max Statkiewicz is associate professor of comparative literature and folklore studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Abbreviations of Nietzsche’s Works
Abbreviations of Dostoevsky’s Works
Introduction
First Chapter: Cruelty: Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Culture
Second Chapter: "Feeling of Thought": Nietzsche’s Critique of Terrible Abstractedness and Dostoevsky’s Triumph in the Concrete
Third Chapter: Purification of Cruelty in Antonin Artaud
Conclusion
In Culture and Cruelty in Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Artaud, Max Stakiewicz deals, once again, with the “old quarrel” between poetry and philosophy. In his previous book – Rhapsody of Philosophy. Dialogues with Plato in Contemporary Thought (2009) – Stakiewicz had already called into question the very idea of such a “quarrel” by showing that the dialogue between “rigor” (akribeia) and “play” (paidia) can be read in Plato himself as a non-conflict. By rethinking the relationship between philosophy and poetry in contemporary thought, Rhapsody of Philosophy concludes that poetry and philosophy are not antagonists, but rather complicit knowledge processes.
In this new book, Stakiewicz goes back to the so-called “Ode to Man” in Sophocles’ Antigone – human being is the most wonderful and the most terrible thing that there is – to argue that culture and cruelty are not binaries but rather different ways of understanding the complex world we live in. Against Matthew Arnold’s culture as “sweetness and light,” which tends to oversee cruelty, Stakiewicz stresses the disquieting power of art by analyzing the revelation of cruelty in his exemplary study of three poet-philosophers or philosopher-poets: Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, and Artaud. Difference in the culture, Stakiewicz shows us in the work of these three artists, is what resists the dreadful nihilism of indifference in a culture that goes on wrecking violence and destruction all over the world.
— Irene Ramalho Santos, University of Coimbra
Through an original and profound reading of the works of Nietzsche, Dostoevsky and Artaud, this book traces the re-emergence in modern culture of a theme whose roots go back to classical antiquity: the regenerative and creative power of cruelty. The argument for the complementary relationship of culture and cruelty and for cruelty’s ability to unsettle and to call into question received ideas makes this work not only a major scholarly study of modernist literature and philosophy, but also an important contribution to the current debate on the meaning, functions and boundaries of culture.
— Luca Somigli, University of Toronto