Story as Self

Authors

  • Robert Malka N/A

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/agon.v15i2.1621

Keywords:

Agonist, Nietzsche, metaphor, Genealogy of Morals

Abstract

What might be the basis of the temporal story linking a subject’s manifestations and transformations, if there is no stable core or substantial self “behind” or “before” our deeds, such that our selves lie within our deeds? So asks Robert Pippin in Nietzsche, Psychology, and First Philosophy. I explore the ways in which a story can find its basis in both “the self” and “the world.” Noting that Nietzsche insists on the separation (lack of causality) between thoughts, deeds, and the image we have of a given deed, I suggest that stories, when wielded consciously, are themselves deeds that can serve to magnify, reduce, or alter the images of previous or future deeds, based on what the interactions between our environment and our "true need" allows us to do. I note that they are often themselves inventions, not needing to be the result of factual occurrences in the world. Seen in this way, stories are a powerful tool for self- and world-transformation, and can enable us to create beautiful versions of ourselves that may not always be or feel initially “true.”

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Published

2021-08-31 — Updated on 2021-10-09

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How to Cite

Malka, R. (2021). Story as Self. The Agonist, 15(2), 43–52. https://doi.org/10.33182/agon.v15i2.1621 (Original work published August 31, 2021)

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Section

Articles