The Sickness Unto Death: A New Translation (Hardcover)

The Sickness Unto Death: A New Translation By Søren Kierkegaard, Bruce H. Kirmmse (Translated by) Cover Image

The Sickness Unto Death: A New Translation (Hardcover)

$26.95


On Our Shelves Now at:
Politics and Prose at 5015 Connecticut Avenue NW
2 on hand, as of Nov 30 5:19am
Politics and Prose at The Wharf (610 Water St SW)
1 on hand, as of Nov 30 6:19am
Politics and Prose at Union Market (1270 5th Street NE)
1 on hand, as of Nov 30 5:33am

The first new translation of Kierkegaard’s masterwork in a generation brings to life this impassioned investigation of the self.


The “greatest psychologist of the spirit since St. Augustine” (Gregory R. Beabout), Soren Kierkegaard is renowned for such richly imagined philosophical works as Fear and Trembling and The Concept of Anxiety. Yet only The Sickness unto Death condenses his most essential ideas—on aesthetics, ethics, and religion—into a single volume.



First published in 1849 under the pseudonym Anti-Climacus, The Sickness unto Death is as demanding as it is concise, posing fundamental yet complicated questions about human nature and the self. Beginning with the biblical story of Lazarus, whom Jesus miraculously raised from the dead, The Sickness unto Death identifies the titular “sickness” as “despair,” a state worse than death because it is “unto” death. As Kierkegaard demonstrates, despair—or, in Christian categories, “sin”—is a sickness not of the body, but of the spirit, and thus, of the self.



A dramatic “medical history” of the course of this sickness, The Sickness unto Death culminates, as all medical histories do, in a crisis, a turning point at which the self, the patient, either realizes or abandons itself. Given the choice between eternal salvation and extinction, Kierkegaard calls upon the self to become receptive in faith to God’s mercy, “even today, even at this hour, even at this instant.”



With his “historian’s eye” (Vanessa Parks Rumble) and “lucid and informative” (George Pattison) introduction, Bruce H. Kirmmse deftly situates The Sickness unto Death in the historical context of the European revolutions of 1848, reminding us that even Kierkegaard was a product of his time and place. Yet as Kirmmse ultimately shows, The Sickness unto Death is as apt for our times as for mid-nineteenth-century Europe, speaking to the human soul across generations and centuries.
Soren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) was a Danish philosopher and theologian.

A professor emeritus at Connecticut College, Bruce H. Kirmmse has published several books and numerous articles on Kierkegaard and was general editor of Kierkegaard’s Journals and Notebooks. His translation of Fear and Trembling appeared in 2021. He lives in Randolph, New Hampshire, and Copenhagen, Denmark.
Product Details ISBN: 9781324091240
ISBN-10: 132409124X
Publisher: Liveright
Publication Date: February 14th, 2023
Pages: 224
Language: English