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- Small, sensitive
- and thoughtful as
- a child, Kafka was
- dominated by his
- father, a big,
- bullet-headed,
- businessman.
- Kafka later said
- that all his works
- were written
- about his father
- #
- Kafka studied law
- believing it was
- the profession
- that would give
- him the most free
- time to write.
- After graduating,
- he worked in the
- 'Worker's Accident
- Insurance Insti-
- tution' in Prague,
- in a stifling
- bureaucracy
- reflected in much
- of his writing
- #
- Shortly before
- the first world
- war Kafka left his
- job and moved to
- Berlin to devote
- himself to his
- writing. His
- on-off relation-
- ship with Felice
- Bauer, and other
- unsatisfactory
- love affairs, did
- little to assuage
- his profound
- feeling of unease
- with the human
- condition
- #
- Full of the 'silent
- screaming' that
- characterized his
- view of the
- world, Kafka's
- letters reflect
- his angst-filled
- inner life. They
- are a record of his
- alienation and of
- his perpetual,
- hopeless search
- for meaning
- #
- Kafka had to be
- persuaded to
- allow anything to
- be published in
- his lifetime, and
- he asked for the
- manuscripts of
- The Castle, The
- Trial and America
- to be burned
- after his death.
- Fortunately, Max
- Brod, the friend
- he entrusted with
- the task, ignored
- his instructions
- #
- Many have taken
- The Castle to be
- religious allegory:
- an anonymous
- man, known
- significantly
- just as 'K', battles
- and pleas with
- unseen authorities
- to achieve - he
- doesn't know
- what. Max Brod
- re-edited the
- book, adding
- substantial
- material found in
- Kafka's notes
- #
- "When Gregor
- Samsa awoke one
- morning from
- uneasy dreams
- he found himself
- transformed in
- his bed into a
- gigantic insect."
- So begins
- Metamorphosis,
- Kafka's most
- nightmarish
- story. Gregor
- remains an insect,
- never emerges
- from his bedroom,
- and slowly dies
- a lonely death
- #
- Kafka died
- practically
- anonymous, like
- the heroes of his
- perplexing novels.
- His work received
- little attention
- until the Thirties.
- By then, the many
- horrors of Nazism
- and Stalinism
- seemed to confirm
- Kafka's prophetic
- and nightmarish
- vision of the world
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