![]() Kathleen Merrow writes: "Nietzsche's metaphors of 'woman' - far from being misogynist - reveal a positive, affirmative 'woman.' His use of this metaphor radically dislocates traditional conceptions of the relationship masculine/feminine as it dislocates the 'truth' of metaphysics. My husband, like myself, always kept friendly memories of Nietzsche his behavior precisely towards women was so sensitive, so natural and comradely, that even today in old age I cannot regard Nietzsche as a despiser of women. In the eighties, when Nietzsche's later writings containing some of the oft-quoted sharp words against women appeared, my husband sometimes told me jokingly not to tell people of my friendly relations with Nietzsche, since this was not very flattering for me. In her memoir of Nietzsche, published seven years after his death, she remarked: Between 18 Nietzsche had close relations with her family. ![]() ![]() Ida von Miaskowski was the wife of the economist August von Miaskowski, who taught at the University of Basel. Friedrich Nietzsche's views on women have attracted controversy, beginning during his life and continuing to the present.Īttitudes in public and in private ![]()
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