During the pandemic, Marjorie Perloff, one of our foremost scholars of
global literature, found her mind ineluctably drawn to the profound
commentary on life and death in the wartime diaries of eminent
philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951). Upon learning that these
notebooks, which richly contextualize the early stages of his magnum
opus, the Tractatus-Logico-Philosophicus, had never before been
published in English, the Viennese-born Perloff determinedly set about
translating them. Beginning with the anxious summer of 1914, this
historic, en-face edition presents the first-person recollections of a
foot soldier in the Austrian Army, fresh from his days as a philosophy
student at Cambridge, who must grapple with the hazing of his fellow
soldiers, the stirrings of a forbidden sexuality, and the formation of
an explosive analytical philosophy that seemed to draw meaning from his
endless brushes with death. Much like Tolstoy's The Gospel in Brief,
Private Notebooks takes us on a personal journey to discovery as it
augments our knowledge of Wittgenstein himself.