Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Extremes of Englishness
- 1 Oscar Levy: A Nietzschean Vision
- 2 Anthony Mario Ludovici: A ‘Light-Weight Superman’
- 3 Nietzsche and Eugenics
- 4 Race and Eugenics
- 5 The ‘Lethal Chamber’ in Eugenic Thought
- Conclusion: From ‘Underman’ to ‘Underclass’
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Oscar Levy: A Nietzschean Vision
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Extremes of Englishness
- 1 Oscar Levy: A Nietzschean Vision
- 2 Anthony Mario Ludovici: A ‘Light-Weight Superman’
- 3 Nietzsche and Eugenics
- 4 Race and Eugenics
- 5 The ‘Lethal Chamber’ in Eugenic Thought
- Conclusion: From ‘Underman’ to ‘Underclass’
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
… it was the Jews who started the slave revolt in morals; a revolt with two millennia of history behind it, which we have lost sight of today simply because it has triumphed so completely … Let us face facts: the people have triumphed – or the slaves, the mob, the herd, whatever you wish to call them – and if the Jews brought it about, then no nation ever had a more universal mission on this earth.
Friedrich Nietzsche, The Genealogy of Morals, 1887, I: vii, ixSurely it is not every one who is chosen to combat a religion or a morality of two thousand years’ standing, first within and then without himself.
Oscar Levy, ‘Editorial Note’ to The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche, Vol. I, 1909, p. ix.A book on Nietzsche, race and eugenics in Britain has no choice but to begin with Oscar Levy. The editor of the first complete English edition of Nietzsche's Collected Works (1909–1913), he was a Jew and a German (both withholding and juxtaposing the two will be seen to be important) who in 1894 abandoned his father's banking business in Wiesbaden for the life of the mind, settling in London as a physician. Levy not only drove forward the reception of Nietzsche in Britain in the face of widespread indifference (though on the basis of the earlier efforts of others), but also wrote much and contributed more to the intellectual development of a whole ‘school’ of thinkers, centred mainly around A. R. Orage and the avant-garde weekly journal, the New Age. His diagnoses of civilisation, penetrating and controversial, not only landed him in trouble with the authorities in the wake of the anti-alien backlash of the post-First World War period, but are still worthy of consideration for their early insights into the coming European cataclysm. Although many of his claims, stemming as they do from his belief in the need to overthrow decadent Judeo-Christian values and replace them with an aristocratic conception of society, are inimical to today's mainstream beliefs, they are consistent, compelling, and not easily dismissed.
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- Information
- Breeding SupermanNietzsche, Race and Eugenics in Edwardian and Interwar Britain, pp. 12 - 32Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2002