Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'

The title of Nietzsche's autobiography, Ecce Homo, repeats (and echoes) the famous di-rective issued by Pilate, the provincial governor of Judea, to the crowd assembled outside the pretorium. While we know, more or less, what Pilate intended the crowd to behold—viz. the unremarkable humanity o...

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Main Author: Daniel Conway
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Axia Academic Publishers 2024-10-01
Series:Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics
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Online Access:http://www.axiapublishers.com/ojs/index.php/labyrinth/article/view/350
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author Daniel Conway
author_facet Daniel Conway
author_sort Daniel Conway
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description The title of Nietzsche's autobiography, Ecce Homo, repeats (and echoes) the famous di-rective issued by Pilate, the provincial governor of Judea, to the crowd assembled outside the pretorium. While we know, more or less, what Pilate intended the crowd to behold—viz. the unremarkable humanity of the innocent prisoner Jesus—it is not entirely clear what Nietzsche expects his readers to behold in his autobiography. Despite imploring his read-ers not to mistake him for another, Nietzsche presents himself in Ecce Homo as nearly indistinguishable from the "moralists" whom he identifies as the targets of his criticism. The key to understanding how "one becomes what one is" lies in Nietzsche's understanding that both he and Jesus have improbably emerged in excess of the disciplinary regimes that formed them. The defiance displayed by Jesus at John 19:5 thus alerts us to the corre-sponding emergence of Nietzsche—as the "first immoralist"—from the morality he has outgrown.
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spelling doaj-art-9502cdff5fb74a3a881fc0cb891cebf92025-02-11T19:37:42ZdeuAxia Academic PublishersLabyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics2410-48171561-89272024-10-0126110.25180/lj.v26i1.350Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'Daniel Conway0Department of Philosophy, College of Arts & Sciences, Texas A&M University, conway[at]tamu.edu The title of Nietzsche's autobiography, Ecce Homo, repeats (and echoes) the famous di-rective issued by Pilate, the provincial governor of Judea, to the crowd assembled outside the pretorium. While we know, more or less, what Pilate intended the crowd to behold—viz. the unremarkable humanity of the innocent prisoner Jesus—it is not entirely clear what Nietzsche expects his readers to behold in his autobiography. Despite imploring his read-ers not to mistake him for another, Nietzsche presents himself in Ecce Homo as nearly indistinguishable from the "moralists" whom he identifies as the targets of his criticism. The key to understanding how "one becomes what one is" lies in Nietzsche's understanding that both he and Jesus have improbably emerged in excess of the disciplinary regimes that formed them. The defiance displayed by Jesus at John 19:5 thus alerts us to the corre-sponding emergence of Nietzsche—as the "first immoralist"—from the morality he has outgrown. http://www.axiapublishers.com/ojs/index.php/labyrinth/article/view/350Friedrich NietzscheEcce HomoThe AntichristJesusPilatemorality
spellingShingle Daniel Conway
Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics
Friedrich Nietzsche
Ecce Homo
The Antichrist
Jesus
Pilate
morality
title Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
title_full Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
title_fullStr Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
title_full_unstemmed Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
title_short Behold the Man, again: What Nietzsche hopes his Readers will see in 'Ecce Homo'
title_sort behold the man again what nietzsche hopes his readers will see in ecce homo
topic Friedrich Nietzsche
Ecce Homo
The Antichrist
Jesus
Pilate
morality
url http://www.axiapublishers.com/ojs/index.php/labyrinth/article/view/350
work_keys_str_mv AT danielconway beholdthemanagainwhatnietzschehopeshisreaderswillseeineccehomo