Scott Horton interviews Julian Young about his new book, Friedrich Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography:
Nietzsche wrote that a “deadly insult” had come between himself and Wagner. You suggest that you’ve learned what it was.Wagner had long disapproved of Nietzsche’s close friendships with menlove he held could only exist between the sexesand by 1877 he was offended by the developing anti-Wagnerian tenor of Nietzsche’s thought. To Nietzsche’s doctor he wrote that the cause of the patient’s many health problemswhich included near blindnesswas “unnatural debauchery, with indications of pederasty.” His former disciple was, in other words, (a) incipiently gay and (b) going blind because he masturbated. Somehow Nietzsche learned not only of the existence of the letter but of its the exact wording. That was the “deadly insult.”
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2010/09/-reconsidering-nietzsche/182246/
