It’s hard to imagine there was a time when there was no word “Kafkaesque.” However, the term had no meaning to those living at the same time Franz Kafka -In all possibilities, include Kafka himself. Born in Prague in 1883, he grew up under a strict, demanding, constantly disappointed father, passing through college and entering the workforce. He ended up with the Workers’ Accident Insurance Association. He says, “I was subject to long hours, unpaid overtime, a lot of paperwork and an absurd and complicated bureaucracy.” The pursuit of wonder The above video. But it was at that same time that he wrote it. Trial, castleand America.
Of course, Kafka had not actually published a book that was ultimately praised in his life. After his death, the job falls Max Bloodthe writer’s only true friend and was involved in violating the author’s expressly stated wish. On his deathbed, Kafka “instructed Max Brod to burn all his unpublished manuscripts.” Instead, Brod “expended the following year or so to organize and publish his notes and manuscripts.” Now that he’s more than a century old, Kafka’s reputation as one of the greatest literary figures of the 20th century is more than safe, and it would actually require a devotional paradox to argue that Brod was wrong not to throw his papers into a bonfire.
Perhaps Kafka’s reputation has grown in some way, and he has found a way to respond in some way, so that his writing responds to the psychological discomfort we all felt to some degree. In such cases, we arrive at the term “caf cask.” “Kafkask” tends to refer to the bureaucratic nature of the capital, judicial, and government system. The typical Kafka hero “is faced with a sudden, absurd situation. There is no explanation. In the end, there is no real chance to overcome them.”
These characters are “are full of any meaningless obstacles they face as they are part of not being able to understand or control what is going on.” They feel “the indomitable desire for answers in conquest over existential issues of anxiety, guilt, absurdity and suffering, unable to actually understand or control the cause of the problem and effectively overcome it.” But “Even in the face of an absurd and hopeless situation, Kafka’s character doesn’t give up. At least at first, they continue to fight their situation and try to reason, understand, or escape from meaninglessness, but ultimately useless” for Kafka, it was all part of another modern day. It appears that the last 21st century will need to start looking for even more powerful adjectives.
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Franz Kafka also suffered on the writer’s block: “I tried writing, effectively useless.” “A complete halt. Endless suffering” (1915).
“Lynchian”, “Cublickys”, “Tarantinoski”, and more than 100 movie words have been added to the Oxford English Dictionary
Based in Seoul Colin marshall Write and broadcasting stationTS about cities, languages, and culture. His projects include the Substack Newsletter Books about cities And the book The Stateless City: Walking through 21st century Los Angeles. Follow him on social networks previously known as Twitter @colinmarshall.
Source: Open Culture – www.openculture.com