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"Cult of the Will is the first comprehensive study of modernity's preoccupation with willpower. From Nietzsche's 'will to power' to the fantasy of a 'triumph of the will' under Nazism, the will -- its pathologies and potential cures -- was a topic of urgent debates in European modernity. In this study, Michael Cowan examines the emergence of 'will therapy' and its impact on arts and culture in Germany after 1900. The book's five chapters lead readers through cross sections of modern German cultural history, including not only literature and aesthetics but also self-help medicine, economics, body culture, and pedagogy. Modernity's fixation on willpower helped prepare the way for fascism, but this trajectory is not Cowan's main concern. His focus falls rather on more widespread 'technologies of the self' and their role in the effort to reimagine agency for a modern subject caught up in increasingly complex systemic networks."--Publisher description.
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Subjects
History, Neurasthenia, Power (Philosophy), Self, Social aspects, Social aspects of Neurasthenia, Will, Power (philosophy), Germany, historyPlaces
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Cult of the will: nervousness and the forging of a modern self in Germany
2008, Pennsylvania State University Press
in English
0271032065 9780271032061
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Table of Contents
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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- Created September 24, 2008
- 13 revisions
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November 28, 2023 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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September 24, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Library of Congress MARC record |