Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis On Killing Oneself

Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis On Killing Oneself by Hermann Burger, published by Wakefield Press in 2022, is a thought-provoking exploration of the themes surrounding suicide. This edition, comprising 208 pages, presents a narrative set in the tunnel-village of Göschenen, where the protagonist, Hermann Burger, mysteriously disappears from his hotel room. Instead of a farewell note, a manuscript titled Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis is discovered, containing 1,046 aphorisms that delve into the complexities of death and the human experience.
Readers will encounter a profound examination of thanatology, reflecting on the impact of traumatic life events such as the dissolution of relationships and the weight of depression. The text draws inspiration from notable thinkers like Wittgenstein and Cioran, offering a nuanced perspective on the interplay between life and death. This edition invites contemplation on the darker aspects of existence while challenging conventional notions of mortality, making it a significant addition to the literary canon.
Official synopsis Publisher
“Hermann Burger is one of the truly great authors of the German language: a writer of consummate control and range, with a singular and haunting worldview.” -Uwe Schütte
In the tunnel-village of Göschenen, a man named Hermann Burger has vanished without a trace from his hotel room, suspected of suicide. What is found in his room is not a note, but a 124-page manuscript entitled Tractatus Logico-Suicidalis: an exhaustive manifesto comprising 1,046 “thanatological” aphorisms (or “mortologisms”) advocating suicide.
This “grim science of killing the self” studies the predominance of death over life, in traumatic experiences such as the breakup of a marriage, years of depression, the erosion of friendships and the disgrace of impotence–but the aphoristic text presents something more complicated than a logical conclusion to life experience. Drawing inspiration from such authors as Wittgenstein, Cioran and Bernhard, Burger’s unsettling work would be published shortly before the author would take his own life.
Hermann Burger (1942-89) was a Swiss author, critic and professor. Author of four novels and several volumes of essays, short fiction and poetry, he first achieved fame with his novel Schilten, the story of a mad village schoolteacher who teaches his students to prepare for death. At the end of his life, he was working on the autobiographical tetralogy Brenner, one of the high points of 20th-century German prose. He died by overdose days after the first volume’s publication.
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