Description: Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche. Introduced by Jonathan Rée. Frontispiece and 8 colour illustrations including a 4-page foldout by Peter Suart. Translated by Graham Parkes. Bound in buckram, blocked with a design by Peter Suart. 344pp. 9½×6¼in. Friedrich Nietzsche is one of the most controversial, unconventional and important figures in the history of modern philosophy. He wrote critically on religious, cultural and social mores, and was famously inspired by Darwinism to declare ‘God is dead’. His philosophy is expressed, not in traditional, objective prose, but in visionary and paradoxical speeches. Nietzsche’s own favourite of his books, and arguably the most influential, was the extended prose poem Thus Spoke Zarathustra – subtitled ‘a book for everyone and nobody’. It is an extraordinary work – forceful, passionate, full of colour and imagery and biblical resonance – in which Nietzsche expounds his philosophy through the prophet-like figure of Zarathustra. Among the many philosophers, thinkers and writers who drew on the work were Heidegger, Freud, Jung, Kafka and D. H. Lawrence, while Richard Strauss, Gustav Mahler and Frederick Delius all composed music using text from the book. Zarathustra, having lived alone in the mountains, comes down to the world of humans to preach to them of a better life. Unable to find understanding among the many, the prophet turns to gathering a small group of disciples, but eventually decides that humanity is not yet ready to be reborn. Zarathustra leaves behind three fundamental ideas for mankind to contemplate: the Overhuman (Übermensch); the will to power, and eternal recurrence. Alongside these over-arching concepts are a host of other radical ideas: that virtue and pity diminish us; that professional scholarship trivialises thinking, and that worthy enemies are more important than friends. Notoriously, many readers have adopted Nietzsche’s ideas for their own purposes, from the fin-de-siècle aesthetes who revelled in the statement ‘nothing is true, everything is permitted’, to the Nazis, who decided that the Übermensch signified a literal master race, rather than Nietzsche’s concept of a spiritually evolved higher being. The philosopher Jonathan Rée has written an illuminating introduction for this Folio edition in which he outlines how Nietzsche’s stylistic innovation is essential to understanding his meaning. Very good condition. Thanks for looking but please take a look at my other listings for sale.
Price: 319.95 GBP
Location: Sheerness
End Time: 2025-02-08T12:46:11.000Z
Shipping Cost: 47.64 GBP
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Item Specifics
Returns Accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Binding: Fine Binding
Place of Publication: United Kingdom
Non-Fiction Subject: Philosophy
Format: Hardback
Language: English
Illustrator: Peter Suart
Special Attributes: 1st Edition, Illustrated, Luxury Edition
Author: Friedrich Nietzsche
Publisher: Folio Society
Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
Weight: 1 Kg
Year Printed: 2012