Author: Friedrich Nietzsche
The novel opens with Zarathustra descending from his cave in the
mountains after ten years of solitude. He is brimming with wisdom and
love, and wants to teach humanity about the overman. He arrives in the
town of the Motley Cow, and announces that the overman must be the
meaning of the earth. Mankind is just a bridge between animal and
overman, and as such, must be overcome. The overman is someone who is
free from all the prejudices and moralities of human society, and who
creates his own values and purpose. The people on the whole seem not to understand
Zarathustra, and not to be interested in the overman. The only exception
is a tightrope walker who has fallen and who dies shortly thereafter.
At the end of his first day among people, Zarathustra is saddened by his
inability to move this "herd" of people in the marketplace. He resolves
not to try to convert the multitudes, but rather to speak to those
individuals who are interested in separating themselves from the herd.
The
bulk of the first three parts is made up of individual lessons and
sermons delivered by Zarathustra. They cover most of the general themes
of Nietzsche's mature philosophy, though often in highly symbolic and
obscure form. He values struggle and hardship, since the road toward the
overman is difficult and requires a great deal of sacrifice. The
struggle toward the overman is often symbolically represented as
climbing a mountain, and the light-hearted free spirit of the overman is
often represented through laughter and dance.
Zarathustra is
harshly critical of all kinds of mass movements, and of the "rabble" in
general. Christianity is based upon a hatred of the body and of this
earth, and an attempt to deny them both by believing in the spirit and
in an afterlife. Nationalism and mass politics are also means by which
weary, weak, or sick bodies try to escape from themselves. Those who are
strong enough, Zarathustra suggests, struggle. Those who are not strong
give up and turn to religion, nationalism, democracy, or some other
means of escape.
The culmination of Zarathustra's preaching is
the doctrine of the eternal recurrence, which claims that all events
will repeat themselves again and again forevermore. Only the overman can
embrace this doctrine, since only the overman has the strength of will
to take responsibility for every moment in his life and to wish nothing
more than for each moment to be repeated. Zarathustra has trouble facing
the eternal recurrence, as he cannot bear the thought that the
mediocrity of the rabble will be repeated through all eternity without
improvement.
In Part IV, Zarathustra assembles in his cave a
number of men who approximate, but who do not quite attain the position
of the overman. There, they enjoy a feast and a number of songs. The
book ends with Zarathustra joyfully embracing the eternal recurrence,
and the thought that "all joy wants deep, wants deep eternity."
Credit/s:
Sparknotes
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