Nietzsche's Journey to Sorrento: Genesis of the Philosophy of the Free Spirit

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Sep 7, 2016 - Philosophy - 159 pages
“When for the first time I saw the evening rise with its red and gray softened in the Naples sky,” Nietzsche wrote, “it was like a shiver, as though pitying myself for starting my life by being old, and the tears came to me and the feeling of having been saved at the very last second.” Few would guess it from the author of such cheery works as The Birth of Tragedy, but as Paolo D’Iorio vividly recounts in this book, Nietzsche was enraptured by the warmth and sun of southern Europe. It was in Sorrento that Nietzsche finally matured as a thinker.

Nietzsche first voyaged to the south in the autumn of 1876, upon the invitation of his friend, Malwida von Meysenbug. The trip was an immediate success, reviving Nietzsche’s joyful and trusting sociability and fertilizing his creative spirit. Walking up and down the winding pathways of Sorrento and drawing on Nietzsche’s personal notebooks, D’Iorio tells the compelling story of Nietzsche’s metamorphosis beneath the Italian skies. It was here, D’Iorio shows, that Nietzsche broke intellectually with Wagner, where he decided to leave his post at Bâle, and where he drafted his first work of aphorisms, Human, All Too Human, which ushered in his mature era. A sun-soaked account of a philosopher with a notoriously overcast disposition, this book is a surprising travelogue through southern Italy and the history of philosophy alike.
 

Contents

Becoming a Philosopher
1
1 Traveling South
6
2 The School of Educators at the Villa Rubinacci
24
3 Walks on the Land of the Sirens
55
4 Sorrentiner Papiere
64
5 The Bells of Genoa and Nietzschean Epiphanies
89
6 Torna a Surriento
123
Notes
127
Editions Abbreviations Bibliography
147
Index
155
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2016)

Paolo D'Iorio is director of the Institut des textes et manuscrits modernes at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique at the École normale supérieure in Paris. His work on Nietzsche includes publications on the concept of eternal return in both its philosophical and cosmological aspects and on the significance of pre-Platonic philosophy for Nietzsche's thought. He is general editor of Nietzsche Source and contributes to the French and Italian editions of Nietzsche's complete works. Sylvia Gorelick is a PhD student in comparative literature at New York University and translator of many works, including Nietzsche's Journey to Sorrento: Genesis of the Philosophy of the Free Spirit, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Bibliographic information