How Smart (and Just) Is Ressentiment?

Journal of Nietzsche Studies 47 (2):247-255 (2016)
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Abstract

Ressentiment—the affectively charged desire for revenge that arises in response to a perceived injury1—is for Nietzsche a concept of central psychological explanatory significance, and thus makes up one of Nietzsche’s most important analytic tools in his attempt to delve into the human psyche and fathom its depth. As Walter Kaufmann says, it “constitutes one of [Nietzsche’s] major contributions to psychology.”2 As such, it has been justly awarded ample attention by scholars in the secondary literature. However, while Nietzsche’s employment of ressentiment in the first essay of the On the Genealogy of Morals has been widely addressed and analyzed,3 Nietzsche’s discussion of this psychic force in the...

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Guy Elgat
Northwestern University

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Nietzsche on Criminality.Laura N. McAllister - 2021 - Dissertation, University of South Florida

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