Legal scholars have only recently begun to address the radical challenges for law and legal theory that follow from Friedrich Nietzsche\u27s pathbreaking work. This collection brings together articles from leading thinkers who consider how Nietzsche\u27s philosophical and rhetorical interventions illuminate the failures of contemporary legal theory. Part One considers the connections between law, political philosophy and Nietzsche\u27s genealogy. Part Two provides a number of competing interpretations of Nietzsche\u27s relevance for legal hermeneutics. Part Three includes articles that chart a course for legal critique that remains true to Nietzsche\u27s radical character. The work of prominent philosophers, including P. Christopher Smith, ...