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Franz Kafka

Representative Man: Prague, Germans, Jews, and the Crisis of Modernism

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  • 810 pages
  • 29 hours of reading

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From the cauldron of fin-de-siècle Middle Europe emerged a writer who embodies the artistic vision of the century—Franz Kafka. This definitive critical biography examines Kafka as the quintessential expression of modernism, presenting a vivid picture of the historical, cultural, and artistic world from which he arose. It explores his entire body of work in light of his status as the representative man of our time. The study includes influential figures such as Freud, Nietzsche, Einstein, Picasso, Rilke, Mahler, and Stravinsky, all part of the radically subversive modernist movement. Yet, it is Kafka who has come to symbolize the essence of the century. Informed by a lifetime of thought and research, and drawing on newly discovered letters to his parents, the biographer leads us through the labyrinth of Prague, amidst growing ethnic tensions that would later explode in World War II, in an empire grappling with its national identity. With remarkable command and insight, the author interweaves the many strands of person, place, and time to illuminate Kafka as an individual, artist, and representative man. This work is an invaluable contribution to literary studies and the history of modern culture.

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Franz Kafka, Frederick Robert Karl

Language
Released
1991
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Hardcover),
Book condition
Good
Price
€8.49

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Title
Franz Kafka
Subtitle
Representative Man: Prague, Germans, Jews, and the Crisis of Modernism
Language
English
Released
1991
Format
Hardcover
Pages
810
ISBN10
0395561434
ISBN13
9780395561430
Series
Description
From the cauldron of fin-de-siècle Middle Europe emerged a writer who embodies the artistic vision of the century—Franz Kafka. This definitive critical biography examines Kafka as the quintessential expression of modernism, presenting a vivid picture of the historical, cultural, and artistic world from which he arose. It explores his entire body of work in light of his status as the representative man of our time. The study includes influential figures such as Freud, Nietzsche, Einstein, Picasso, Rilke, Mahler, and Stravinsky, all part of the radically subversive modernist movement. Yet, it is Kafka who has come to symbolize the essence of the century. Informed by a lifetime of thought and research, and drawing on newly discovered letters to his parents, the biographer leads us through the labyrinth of Prague, amidst growing ethnic tensions that would later explode in World War II, in an empire grappling with its national identity. With remarkable command and insight, the author interweaves the many strands of person, place, and time to illuminate Kafka as an individual, artist, and representative man. This work is an invaluable contribution to literary studies and the history of modern culture.