How Long Is Nietzsche'S Ecce Homo In Pages?

2025-08-16 20:39:38 384
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4 Answers

Victoria
Victoria
2025-08-19 06:06:10
I can tell you that 'Ecce Homo' by Friedrich Nietzsche is a relatively short but incredibly dense read. The standard English edition typically runs around 100-120 pages, depending on the publisher and formatting. For example, the Penguin Classics version sits at roughly 144 pages, including extensive footnotes and supplementary material.

What's fascinating about 'Ecce Homo' isn't just its length but how Nietzsche packs so much introspection and wit into such a compact work. It's his autobiographical reflection written just before his mental breakdown, making every page crackle with urgency. The Walter Kaufmann translation, widely considered the definitive English version, comes in at about 110 pages of pure philosophical gold. The book's brevity makes it accessible, but its depth ensures you'll be revisiting passages constantly.
Caleb
Caleb
2025-08-20 03:05:57
From my experience collecting various editions of Nietzsche's works, 'Ecce Homo' stands out as his most intimate and strangely accessible book. The page count usually falls between 90-130 across different printings. I particularly love the Dover Thrift Edition which keeps it lean at exactly 96 pages - no fluff, just Nietzsche's unfiltered thoughts about his life and work. The physical thickness can be deceptive too; the dense philosophical content makes each page worth multiple rereads. It's the kind of book where you'll find yourself stopping every few pages to underline something brilliant.
Jolene
Jolene
2025-08-21 09:32:45
My paperback copy of 'Ecce Homo' is 112 pages of Nietzsche at his most personal and provocative. The page length varies by publisher, but most modern editions stay in this range. What's remarkable is how much autobiography, philosophy and biting humor Nietzsche crams into this space. Compared to his other works, it's practically a novella - 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra' is three times as long - yet every sentence carries weight. The layout affects length too; editions with wide margins and spacious typesetting might hit 130 pages without adding content.
Adam
Adam
2025-08-22 16:22:32
I've got a well-worn copy of 'Ecce Homo' on my shelf that I frequently recommend to friends dipping their toes into Nietzsche. My edition from Vintage Books clocks in at 118 pages, front matter included. The actual content is even shorter - you could probably read the whole thing in one intense afternoon if you wanted. The beauty lies in how Nietzsche turns this compact format into a whirlwind tour of his entire philosophy, with chapters like 'Why I Am So Wise' that manage to be both profound and darkly humorous. Different translations vary slightly; the Oxford World's Classics edition runs longer at about 160 pages due to scholarly commentary.
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