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3.5 

Thus Spake Zarathustra

By Friedrich Nietzsche
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Publisher Description

Thus Spake Zarathustra was Friedrich Nietzsche’s favorite of the books he wrote, and has been his most popular amongst general readers. Yet some scholars dislike it because of its unphilosophical nature: it eschews jargon and the scaffolding of arguments, which engage only the intellect, in favor of an artistic approach that engages the whole mind.

After ten years of solitude in a cave high in the mountains, Zarathustra wishes to share with humanity the wisdom he has accumulated during this time. He reaches the nearest town and addresses the crowd on the marketplace. He tells them of the Overman: the next step in human evolution, a being who creates their own values, freed from the weight of tradition and morality, and who takes responsibility for their own successes and failures. But the crowd doesn’t understand him; his discourse is met only with rude ignorance. Zarathustra then decides to gather a small group of disciples and share his wisdom with them.

The bulk of the book is Zarathustra’s speeches on topics such as morality, society, individualism, religion, and how suffering and its overcoming are what give meaning to our existence. While already wiser than most, Zarathustra still learns from those he talks to, re-evaluating his thoughts as he deals with disappointment (such as when his disciples prove to be mere followers), and confronting his own doubts. His greatest challenge, though, comes when he faces the existential test of the eternal recurrence of the same: the thought that our lives could repeat indefinitely without the minutest of change.

The inspiration for Zarathustra came to Nietzsche during one of the long hikes he often indulged in despite his failing health. It was a decade of solitude: his physical condition had worsened to the point of forcing him to retire from his position at the University of Basel, and each change of season prompted him to relocate to kinder climes in Switzerland, France, or Italy. The book took two years to write. Each of its four parts was written in a ten-day period of creative effervescence followed by months of gloom, plagued by terrible, debilitating migraines.

Zarathustra was initially received with indifference at best and frustration at worst. It’s a work of philosophy as much as aesthetics: the language is modeled after the Luther Bible and contains numerous references to Homer, Heraclitus, Plato, Goethe, Emerson, and Wagner, to name a few. Later Nietzsche attempted to address the book’s lack of popularity by framing the same concepts in a more traditional, approachable manner in his following book, Beyond Good and Evil, but that book also struggled to find an audience.

With his health steadily deteriorating, Nietzsche’s mind broke down in 1889 and never recovered. His body would live on for 11 more years, and he ended up in the care of his sister, Elisabeth. A stalwart nationalist and anti-Semite, she saw in her brother’s illness the opportunity to turn him into a German hero. Despite her brother’s firm opposition to nationalism, anti-Semitism, and power politics, she perverted his work by promoting it for her own ends. Scores of commentators partook in her lie and enthusiastically used Nietzsche’s work to buttress their own contrary views. Doing so requires one to selectively ignore half the content of the book: Zarathustra’s discourses regularly touch on a priori dark and violent themes, but they also clearly state that these are to be directed towards oneself. Reaching the Overman requires us to know ourselves, and such introspection, given the darker side of human nature, leads to contempt. This contempt for ourselves, says Nietzsche, should be embraced as the first step towards awareness of what we could be. Cruelty, likewise, stems from that knowledge as a necessity to hammer ourselves into the proper shape. Such commentators also conveniently ignored Zarathustra’s many remarks about love: love for ourselves, he says, is what can prevent us from spreading resentment around us during this difficult process of change.

The first English translation of Zarathustra was by Alexander Tille, a German scholar who had emigrated to Scotland. English wasn’t his first language and his work suffered from it. Thomas Common, a Scottish scholar, used Tille’s work as the base for his own translation. Bringing Zarathustra to the English-speaking world was no easy task given Nietzsche’s stylistic idiosyncrasies. Just like Nietzsche, Common took risks: because the book is written in the style of the Luther Bible, Common decided to emulate the style of the King James Bible; he also tried to reproduce the musicality of the language and the new words coined by Nietzsche, some of which have been updated over time—e.g. Common’s “Superman” is nowadays known as “Overman.” While his choices have been controversial, he produced a landmark translation that faithfully tried to convert the unique flavor of Zarathustra into English. Published in 1909, it would take four decades until the next translation by Walter Kaufman in 1954.

But Zarathustra didn’t find its scholarly fame limited to Europe: soon after its publication, it reached Asia, where it was received with enthusiasm, particularly in China and Japan where it influenced the famous Kyoto School. Zarathustra has also received special attention from the music world. Nietzsche loved music and poetry, and it was his wish that this book be taken as music. No fewer than 87 pieces have been inspired by the book, in part or as a whole. The best known are Richard Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra, the fourth movement of Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 3, and Frederick Delius’ A Mass of Life.

31 Reviews

3.5
Thumbs Up“Not as enlightening as I first read it years ago but still holds true in some regards.”
Thumbs Up“I am certainly not qualified to review philosophy, but if a lay reader's opinions are at all interesting, here goes. Nietzsche's style in this work is obnoxious—deliberately, I suspect. Perhaps that which is true in the internet age was true then: anger fuels engagement. However, I think incendiary rhetoric isn't necessarily indicative of worthwhile ideas (let Nietzsche's thoughts on the capabilities and uses of women settle all doubt on that point). And what were those ideas? From my reading, Nietzsche seems to believe that people must do away with their complacency, indifference, and self-loathing if humanity is to advance to its full potential, his "Übermensch." There is much that he says with which I disagree, much I find to have no more depth than sibilant ravings, yet—curiously—much in terms of fundamentals which which I do agree, even as a Christian. I have myself arrived in thought at many of Nietzsche's little proverbs, but from a Christian, rather than atheistic, foundation. Because I was often able to agree with Nietzsche, I found him hypocritical. He seems to criticize the Christian religion for one thing or another, only to later write favorably of Zarathustra for behaving or thinking in the same way. The fact that Nietzsche insisted on tying his philosophy of the Übermensch to his denigration of Christianity weakens his arguments. Perhaps most confounding to me (other than the misogyny) is the importance Nietzsche places on the individual in "self-overcoming" for reaching the Übermensch—it's all will and command and the power to self-obedience with him, one man sitting in sun-blessed solitude atop a mountain. He seems at best to forget, or at worst deride, the fact that humanity has society, science, and the arts at all because of human collaboration and collective effort. There is value in solitude and self-mastery, to be sure, but if this Übermensch can be generated at all, it will be in the way humans generate all human things: together, through collaboration and relationship. My overall impression of this work is strongly colored by my brief reading on Nietzsche's life which I found on his Wikipedia page. That impression is this: Thus Spoke Zarathustra contains the self-aggrandizing ravings of an oblivious sadboy who can't (or refuses to) understand that his problems forming meaningful relationships with other humans (especially women) might be caused by faults in his own personality. His words which may have been radical in his time would hardly garner a second glance in the modern day, so I find little value here aside from the historical.”

About Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (15 October 1844 – 25 August 1900) was a German philosopher, cultural critic and philologist whose work has exerted a profound influence on modern intellectual history. He began his career as a classical philologist before turning to philosophy. He became the youngest person ever to hold the Chair of Classical Philology at the University of Basel in 1869 at the age of 24. Nietzsche resigned in 1879 due to health problems that plagued him most of his life; he completed much of his core writing in the following decade. In 1889, at age 45, he suffered a collapse and afterward a complete loss of his mental faculties. He lived his remaining years in the care of his mother until her death in 1897 and then with his sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche. Nietzsche died in 1900.

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