![]() It would make things easier for the translator if TSZ were not so astonishingly opaque. That Nietzsche, like Kierkegaard, the German Romantics, and many of the twentieth-century Existentialists, thought philosophy and literature were ultimately inseparable arts only further complicates the translator's task. ![]() Literature doesn't have only a sense, it also has a sound. And you can't translate literature literally and have it work out well. While it is an undeniably philosophical work - Nietzsche, the most widely influential philosopher of the past two hundred years, considered it his masterpiece - it is also a work of literature. With a traditional philosophical text the translator's conscience is driven by accuracy, and when in doubt the translator will be as literal as possible. Thus Spoke Zarathustra (hereafter TSZ) is a difficult book to translate. ![]()
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