A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka
Edited by James Rolleston
No other writer of German-language literature in the 20th century has been as fully accepted into the canon of world literature as Franz Kafka. The unsettlingly, enigmatically surreal world depicted in Kafka's novels and stories continues to fascinate readers and critics of each new generation, who in turn continue to find new readings. One thing has become wholly clear: although all theories attempt to appropriate Kafka, there is no one key to his work. The challenge to critics has been to present a strong point of view while taking account of previous Kafka research, a challenge that has been met by the contributors to this volume. The essays follow an introduction by the editor, and include: Clayton Koelb on the controversial question of Kafka editions; Walter H. Sokel on a life of reading--and writing about--Kafka; Judith Ryan on the early stories; Russell A. Berman on tradition and betrayal in `The Judgment'; Ritchie Robertson on anti-Christian elements in `The Judgment,' `The Metamorphosis,' and the aphorisms; Henry Sussman on Kafka's evolving aesthetics; Stanley Corngold on The Trial; Bianca Theisen on Kafka's use of circus motifs in the stories `Up in the Gallery' and `First Sorrow'; Rolf J. Goebel on the connection of Kafka's The Missing Person, `In the Penal Colony,' and `The Great Wall of China' to postcolonial critique; Richard T. Gray on the semiotics and aesthetics of `In the Penal Colony'; Ruth V. Gross on the `enigmatics' of the short fiction; Sander L. Gilman on Kafka's Jewishness and the story `The Country Doctor'; John Zilcosky on the colonial visions in The Castle; Mark Harman on the variants to The Castle and what they tell us about Kafka's writing process; and Clayton Koelb on Kafka's rhetoric in the late stories `Josephine the Singer' and `The Burrow.' James Rolleston is Professor of German at Duke University and has written widely on topics in modern German literature.
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DETAILS
392 pages Size: 9 x 6 in 13 digit ISBN: 9781571131805
Binding: Hardback First published: 01/Apr/2002 Last printed: 16/Sep/2002 Price: 90.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: Camden House Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Subject: German Literature
BIC class: AVH
STATUS: Available
Details updated on 01/12/2008
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Contents
| 1 | |
Introduction: Kafka Begins James Rolleston
| 2 | |
Critical Editions I: The 1994 Paperback Edition James Rolleston
| 3 | |
Critical Editions II: Will the Real Franz Kafka Please Stand Up?
| 4 | |
Beyond Self-Assertion: A Life of Reading Kafka Walter H. Sokel
| 5 | |
Kafka Before Kafka: The Early Stories Judith L. Ryan
| 6 | |
Tradition and Betrayal in "Das Urteil" Russell A. Berman
| 7 | |
Kafka as Anti-Christian: "Das Urteil," "Die Verwandlung" and the Aphorisms Ritchie Robertson
| 8 | |
Kafka's Aesthetics: A Primer: From the Fragments to the Novels Henry Sussman
| 9 | |
Medial Allusions at the Ouset of Der Proce; or, res in media Stanley Corngold
| 10 | |
Kafka's Circus Turns: "Auf der Galerie" and "Erstes Leid" Bianca Theisen
| 11 | |
Kafka and Postcolonial Critique: Der Verschollene, "In der Strafkolonie," "Beim Bau der Chinesischen Mauer" Rolf J Goebel
| 12 | |
Disjunctive Signs: Semiotics, Aesthetics and Failed Mediation in "In der Strafkolonie" Richard T. Gray
| 13 | |
Hunting Kafka Out of Season: Enigmatics in the Short Fictions Ruth V. Gross
| 14 | |
A Dream of Jewishness Denied: Kafka's Tumor and "Ein Landarzt" Sander L. Gilman
| 15 | |
Surveying the Castle: Kafka's Colonial Visions John Zilcosky
| 16 | |
Making Everything "A Little Uncanny": Kafka's Variants to Das Schlo and What They Can Tell Us About His Writing Process Mark Harman
| 17 | |
Kafka Imagines His Readers: The Rhetoric of "Josefine die Sängerin" and "Der Bau"
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Reviews
Contains new material and insights by noted scholars whose work represents a full range of methodological and thematic diversity. CHOICE
Appropriately reflects the ever-widening circles within which Kafka's texts can be viewed. Especially prominent ... are the discussions of texts as meta-narratives, their thematizations of problematic message transfer, and their meditations on unbridgeable misconception. MODERN AUSTRIAN LITERATURE
This is a particularly successful collection,... several of whose individual studies will undoubtedly become touchstones of future Kafka research. GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW
...this collection is necessary for any student of Kafka. The voices represented here, from the seasoned ... to the newly emerging, speak to the wide methodological range that typifies Kafka studies....The effect of these essays is cumulative, at times revelatory. GERMAN QUARTERLY
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