Abstract
This book presents a suggestive, creative, to some extent impatient reading of Nietzsche from the viewpoint of metaphor. Kofman has studied under Jacques Derrida, and this fact is evidenced in her book, e.g., in the consideration given to ériture [[sic]]. Kofman shows how the pre-Socratics are paradigmatic for Nietzsche’s understanding of philosophy. "It is a matter of making the original Greek philosophy return, of rescuing it from the oblivion where the triumph of nihilistic forces had caused it to sink, of repeating it by taking it as a model". For Nietzsche, this means a return to the richness of metaphorical writing, as exemplified in Heraclitus, as opposed to the strictures of reason and its rigid concepts in Aristotle. Kofman goes on to discuss the oblivion of the metaphor, and the development of conceptual thinking. The world becomes simplified, generalized, in terms of the concept, which is itself, however, the product of a more diversified metaphorical activity.