The Trouble with Being Born (book)
The Trouble with Being Born (French: De l'inconvénient d'être né) is a French 1973 philosophy book by Romanian author Emil Cioran, translated into English in 1976 by Richard Howard, for which he received the PEN Translation Prize.[1] The book is presented as a series of aphorisms, meditating primarily on the painful nature of being alive, and how this is connected to other subjects, such as God, metaphysical exile, and decay.[2] In 2020, The Trouble with Being Born became a Penguin Modern Classic.[3]
Author | Emil Cioran |
---|---|
Translator | Richard Howard |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Genre | Philosophy |
Publisher | Arcade Publishing |
Publication date | 1973 |
Published in English | 1976 |
Pages | 217 |
ISBN | 9781611450446 |
Usage of aphorism
Cioran's decision to write entirely in aphorisms was a departure from his previously established writing style. On the Heights of Despair was composed of essays, about a page each, which while different to most conventional philosophy, also separates it from The Trouble with Being Born. Speaking about his decision to write in such a manner, Cioran said he used aphorisms because "Explaining bores me terribly. When I've written aphorisms it's because I've sunk back into fatigue – why bother? And so, the aphorism is scorned by 'serious' people, professors look down upon it. When they read a book of aphorisms, they say, 'Oh, look what this guy said ten pages back, now he's saying the contrary. He's not serious.' I can put two aphorisms that are contradictory right next to each other. It's not at all gratuitous."[4]
The Trouble with Being Born also makes direct reference to aphorisms. The book describes aphorisms as "Fire without flames. Understandable that no-one tries to warm himself at it."[5]
Reception
Writing for The Independent, Nicholas Lezard said "Why should we be interested in the opinions of this eccentric, who is, moreover, contradictory, perverse, resistant to intellectual theory and uninterested in questions of semiotics? Because Cioran actually makes his philosophy perfectly democratic, assimilable by anyone. Cioran's loathing is genuine, all-inclusive, and yet perversely generous (the book's second-last aphorism begins 'No one has loved the world more than I . . .', which might be a joke). Only someone so doubtful of the world's fundamental givens can be trusted. His scepticism lights things up like a torch."[6]
In an issue of The Millions, Michael Robbins cited The Trouble with Being Born as one of his favourite books, and said "it's a pity Cioran and Weil never met."[7]
References
- Cioran, E. M. (February 2013). The Trouble with Being Born. ISBN 9781611457407.
- "E.M. Cioran". Itineraries of a Hummingbird.
- "The Trouble With Being Born". Penguin. Archived from the original on 2020-12-15.
- Weiss, Jason (1991). Writing at Risk: interviews in Paris with uncommon writers. p. 31.
- Cioran, Emil (1976). The Trouble with Being Born. Arcade Publishing. p. 143.
- Lezard, Nicholas (1993). "BOOK REVIEW / Warmth at the art of aphorism: The trouble with being born - E M Cioran, trs Richard Howard: Quartet, pounds 8.95". The Independent.
- Robbins, Michael (2013). "A Year in Reading: Michael Robbins". The Millions.