Available Formats
Ecce Homo: How One Becomes What One is
By (Author) Friedrich Nietzsche
Translated by R. J. Hollingdale
Introduction by Michael Tanner
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Classics
15th July 2025
17th April 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
Psychological theory, systems, schools and viewpoints
193
Paperback
144
Width 110mm, Height 180mm, Spine 8mm
90g
90 classic titles celebrating 90 years of Penguin Books 'No, I don't hate being black. I'm just tired of saying it's beautiful. No, I don't hate myself. I'm just tired of people bruising their knuckles on my jaw.' A novella with the force of a screaming trumpet flare, Dambudzo Marechera's seminal literary debut explores a body and spirit exiled from the land and the self. An inimitable and internationally admired writer, his profound ambivalence and wry, existential sensibility was forged in this iconic book.
Dambudzo Marechera was born in 1952 in Vengere, the township of Rusape, in the east of what was then Rhodesia. He was the third of nine children in a family which became destitute once his father was killed in a road accident in 1966. he gained a scholarship to study at New College, Oxford, where he was sent down in 1976 to live out his exile in Britain in a succession of squats for another six years. He hammered out the first draft of The House of Hunger on his portable typewriter in a matter of weeks. It won the Guardian First Novel Prize and was translated into six languages. Marechera died in 1987 after being diagnosed with AIDS.