An authoritative collection of essays celebrating Kafka's life and work, and examining how his writing has continued to provide inspiration for over a century.
An authoritative collection of essays celebrating Kafka's life and work, and examining how his writing has continued to provide inspiration for over a century.
Franz Kafka died in 1924, when he was not yet forty-one. During his life he published only seven small books, but he left behind three unfinished novels and a mass of stories, reflections and personal writings which were published after his death. His novels in particular, alongside short stories such as The Judgement and The Metamorphosis, have made him one of the most widely read, significant and influential writers of the twentieth century. His writings show an extraordinary ability to speak to the changing concerns of later generations.
This collection of essays, illustrated with manuscripts, archival material, postcards and family photographs, not only sets Kafka in the context of his life and times but also shows how his own experiences nourished his imagination. Literal travel in Western Europe enabled him, as his notebooks reveal, to practise descriptive writing. Imaginative travel through reading strengthened his fascination with remote spaces and made him aware of European colonialism. Familiar settings in his fiction become alien and bewildering. When writing about animals, he sought to enter imaginatively into their non-human way of being. This book is a celebration not just of Kafka's achievements and creativity, but also of how - even 100 years after his death - Kafka continues to inspire new literary, theatrical and cinematic creations around the world.
‘…a superbly illustrated book of essays, Kafka: making of an Icon, edited by emeritus Oxford professor of German Ritchie Robertson… open[s] up fascinating new perspectives on Kafka’s life and work, making us look at him very differently.’
-- DAVID HERMAN The Jewish Chronicle'Ably edited and beautifully produced [Kafka: Making of an Icon]…includes a wealth of material…As well as images, a series of crisp and concise essays by the curators guides us through Kafka’s world…’
-- Ben Hutchinson'...the Bodleian Library has published a superbly illustrated book of essays, Kafka: Making of an Icon by leading Kafka scholars. These essays open up fascinating new perspectives on the writer's life and work.'
-- David HermanRitchie Robertson retired in 2021 as Schwarz-Taylor Professor of German at Oxford. He is the author of Kafka: Judaism, Politics, and Literature (1985).
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