Kafkaesque topic
Hi, Greentea. (I am writing this on daughter's computer because mine is acting down again!). You might even be related to the K-man, whom I admire very much, as I have studied him off and on for over twenty years.
I have just finished reading a book called What You Should Know About Kafka Before You Waste Your Lifeby James Hawes. Below I have analyzed the part of his book that deals with his expose of why Franz continues to fascinate and inspire us. There are some direct quotes as well.
The Kafkaesque Appeal: An Analysis of Special K (by Susan G, based on Hawes expose)
- Comic/tragic atmosphere in his stories, due to his brilliant use of the German Language
- Kafka understood the tension between our yearning for the past and fear/awe of the future, and this is a theme in all his literature/diaries. (The 'present' will be dealt with as the final point in my analysis.)
- The reader identifies with the protagonists in the stories (empathy) that we accept them, warts and all, including their delusions--then we become absorbed into each protagonist's life (eg, K, Gregor, The Hunger Artist)
- Kafka intertwines realsim with dramatic nightmarish imagery, which facillitates acceptance of the bizarre tortuous ride of the story
- Kafka's Hasidic storytelling style emphasizes/identifies the chasm between the world we desire and the world we are in. In this chasm is Sartre's Nothingness, if you understand existentialism and spot this in the stories.
- The stories have the "feeling of literature, but they simply refuse to deliver what we expect of literature." p.226 (quote)
- Because of the above statement, there is not a good end to the adventure, so the winner is not the protagonist, whose end is usually unclear and rather unpleasant. Here Kafka is a realist, not an idealist
- We sympathize with the protagonists who do not get what they expect (justice). In this way they cannot go back or forward. Then they live in a sort of present hell (Hell is other people! [Sartre]) This is a lesson for us. Read my conclusion!
In conclusion, how do we break free?? How do we find the door, both figuratively and literally? Kafka's protagonists do not find that door, or they find it shut/locked (there is similar imagery in Steven Spielberg's movies). But in real life, each of us must alone find an individual door that is made for us. And each of us has always had the key (like Dorothy's ruby slippers!). (My key imagery!! !) But Kafka does not tell us--each must find our own way. His stories never give us the end we would really like. So he leaves us hanging (cliffhanger) and we can choose (existential choice) to be open to this choice as it has the potential to be the end (or is it beginning? Even Kafka kept us hanging by puzzling us as to whether he was beginning, end (or by extension, perhaps middle?) or none of those! He wishes us good luck on our quests, and if it takes a lifetime to find the door(s), then so be it.
Awesomely excellent topic, Paolo.
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