Historia de la eternidad explained

Historia de la eternidad
Author:Jorge Luis Borges
Country:Argentina
Language:Spanish
Genre:essay
Published:1936, Viau y Zona (Buenos Aires)
Pages:121
Oclc:435372797

Historia de la eternidad (in English: A History of Eternity) is a book of essays published by Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges, in 1936 (editio princeps).

Content

See also: Jorge Luis Borges and mathematics. In the essay after which the book is titled, which is complemented by two others (La doctrina de los ciclos, in English: Cycles' doctrine, and El tiempo circular, in English: Circular time), the author contemplates the issues of time and eternity, from platonic, Christian and Nietzschean perspectives. As Borges himself states in the book's prologue, eternity

In the essays titled Los Kenningar (in English: The Kenningars) and La metáfora (in English: Metaphor), Borges analyzes that poetic resource, particularly from the point of view of the ancient Germanic epics. By comparing metaphors present in the ancient Icelandic sagas with later ones, we can observe how the same ones are repeated from one culture to another:

In Los traductores de Las Mil y Una Noches (in English: The translators of One Thousand and One Nights) the author discusses the different old versions of the celebrated collection of oriental stories.

The book is completed by one of the Borges' most noted essay-stories, which also appears in his acclaimed Ficciones: El acercamiento a Almotásim (in English: The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim), and a short and tasteful review of satiric literature and classical insults (El arte de injuriar, in English: The Art of Insulting).

Essays

See also