Montaigne
[Fragment]
-
- 1,99 €
-
- 1,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Mit dem Autorenporträt aus dem Metzler Lexikon Weltliteratur.
Mit Daten zu Leben und Werk, exklusiv verfasst von der Redaktion der Zeitschrift für Literatur TEXT + KRITIK.
Der französische Philosoph Michel Eyquem Seigneur de Montaigne (1533–1592) hat den Menschen – nicht zuletzt sich selbst – in seiner Unvollkommenheit, der Vielfalt, der Widersprüchlichkeit und der Veränderlichkeit seines Charakters gesehen und ihm kraft seiner Individualität in allem »innere Freiheit« zuerkannt. Stefan Zweig setzt ihm in seinem Essay ein Denkmal und verfasst damit quasi gleichzeitig eine Rechtfertigung seiner selbst.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the autumn of 1941, Zweig, a bestselling Austrian-Jewish novelist and biographer who had fled to Brazil to escape the Nazis, discovered a copy of Michel de Montaigne's Essays in a basement of his new house. Over the next few months he committed suicide in February 1942 Zweig immersed himself in Essays and produced this little reflection on the 16th-century man of letters. Thanks to Stone's assiduous translation, Zweig's fascinating meditation on the writer in whom he saw himself mirrored appears now for the first time in English. Zweig weaves biographical elements into his study Montaigne's study of Latin at age four, his retirement from his public duties as a French nobleman at age 38 but the book is more properly an introduction to an endlessly inquisitive thinker who never stopped searching for the truth. Zweig depicts Montaigne as trying throughout his life to "safeguard the deepest region of spirit... from the danger of being sacrificed to the deranged prejudices of others." This captivating study portrays a writer whose life and work can be summed up by his constant posing of the question, "How should I live?"