Franz Kafka (1883-1924) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Franz Kafka (1883-1924)

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Title: Franz Kafka (1883-1924)


1
Franz Kafka (1883-1924)
  • "I think we ought to read only the kind of
    books that wound and stab us...We need the books
    that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us
    deeply, like the death of someone we loved more
    than ourselves, like being banished into forests
    far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be
    the axe for the frozen sea inside us."

2
Kafkas Life
  • Born in 1883 into a middle-class, German-speaking
    Jewish family in Prague
  • Studied law
  • Worked at an insurance company in order to
    support his parents
  • Had very little time to devote to his writing
  • Contracted tuberculosis in 1917 and was supported
    by his sister and parents
  • Had few relationships, broke two engagements and
    lived with a woman on his deathbed.
  • Suffered from clinical depression, social
    anxiety, and several other illnesses triggered by
    stress
  • Died in 1924 from starvation when his
    tuberculosis worsened and could not swallowed

3
Kafkas Alienation
  • Felt he was an outsider
  • Jewish in Catholic Prague didnt feel he had
    anything in common with his heritage (or himself
    for that matter)
  • Obsessed with being Sickly both physically
    and mentally
  • Lonely - forced privacy, aversion to sexual
    relations
  • Perceived human beings as being trapped by
    authority in
  • a hopeless world stems from issues with
    his own father from which he felt he was always
    trying to escape "My writing was all about you
    all I did there, after all, was to bemoan what I
    could not bemoan upon your breast. It was an
    intentionally long-drawn-out leave-taking from
    you."
  • Became frustrated at having to support his family
  • Had to work in a meaningless bureaucratic job
    where he was just another pencil pusher

4
Modern Alienation Fragmentation
  • The city
  • Dehumanization
  • Modern means of productiondivision of labor
  • Sense of worthlessness
  • Acceleration of life and travel
  • Mechanization, bureaucracy
  • Class stratification

5
Kafkaesque
A situation in which someone is at the mercy of a
collective logic that he or she does not
understand and perceives to be comically absurd.
  • Metamorphosis A traveling salesman is turned
    into a bug in the first sentence

6
Kafka Three Movements
  • Expressionism
  • Surrealism
  • Existentialism

7
Expressionism
  • Seeks to reproduce not objective reality but the
    subjective reality which people, objects, and
    events arouse in us
  • Depicts a psychological or spiritual reality
    through distortion and/or exaggeration
  • Presents the distorted, exaggerated situation as
    if it were completely real
  • Emphasizes visionary experience
  • Pierces the surface of things to reveal essences
  • Explores how to transcend the material world
  • Replaces concrete particulars with allegorical
    forms

8
Surrealism
  • An artistic movement that focused on
    impossibilities and contradictions that suggested
    the subconscious reality of the dream world
    rather than the tangible reality of the physical
    world.

9
Existentialism
  • The most significant philosophical movement of
    the 20th century, EXISTENTIALISM is the belief
    that reality, in any meaningful sense, must be
    created through individual actions and choices.
  • Existentialism is the opposite of
    ESSENTIALISM, or the belief that reality,
    meaning, and significance precede individual
    actions and choices.
  • Essentialism To be is to do.
  • Existentialism To do is to be.

10
Non-Existence
  • For existentialists, failure to act in any
    meaningful way becomes a failure to exist.
  • Failure to act for oneself becomes a failure to
    define oneself.
  • Selflessness, usually seen as a virtue in
    essentialist thought, becomes literally the
    absence of a self.

11
Meaning of The MetamorphosisPart 1
12
Gregor Samsa represents a specific type of
behaviorthe fear of being alive with all of its
risks/rewards, living a submissive vermin-like
lifewhich, in the end, is transformed into the
acceptance of life with all of its vicissitudes.
Kafka and Samsa share a lot in terms of
personal struggle. Supporting an unappreciative,
disconnected family, struggles with a difficult
father, not living their own lives fully. The
name Samsa is important in two ways it is a
cryptogram of Kafka. And when broken apart,
Samsa means I am alone.
The Inner Metamorphosis
13
Biological Metamorphosis
  • Takes place in distinct stages
  • larval stage
  • then enter an inactive state called pupa or
    chrysalis
  • finally emerge as adults
  • Gregors transformation parallels this
    metamorphosis.
  • Gregor learns about who he really is through an
    overwhelming psychological experience that turns
    him inward.His first step in this journey is
    disobedience - Refuses to go to work -
    Refuses to follow the rules of etiquette

14
Gregors greater concern with missing work than
over his transformation- The picture of the
woman and the handmade frame- The disconnected
terms used to describe his new form- The firm
and the manager - The uselessness of the bug
body until it walked on the floor as a bug
should- The father shooing and hissing at Gregor
Important Images
15
Meaning of The MetamorphosisPart 2
16
Continued Metamorphosis
  • Gregors tastes have changed. Kosher,
    acceptable, foods no longer interest him.
  • He heals far faster than he used to as a human.
  • He now prefers tight spaces but also runs along
    the ceiling which energizes and amuses him.
  • He is not only untouchable but also invisible.
    He hides himself from his family under a sheet
    because he upsets them. No longer a useful
    member of the family, he is a burden. Gregor
    pities his family and their financial situation
    more than himself, and they also pity themselves
    more than him too.

17
The Actions of the Family
  • Grete is the only relative who tends to Gregor
    for over a month. But she still does not talk to
    him or treat him like her brother.
  • Cleaning up
  • Feeding him (garbage)
  • His mothers distress over his son shows a
    pent-up love that hasnt been expressed in a long
    time. Gregor is surprised to hear his mother
    directly showing concern for him. Her maternal
    instinct, though, is more wrapped around hope
    that hell transform back, not for the current
    insect Gregor.
  • Gregors father takes a forceful, dominant
    position above his son after he takes charge of
    the family again. He does not understand
    Gregors change and does not wish to sympathize.
    He is aggressive in dealing with Gregor what
    sort of father pelts his son with fruit?
  • Gregors father saving a nice chunk of the money
    that Gregor earned, forcing Gregor to work a year
    or two longer than he had to, is another symbol
    of his fathers lack of concern over his son

18
Meaning of The MetamorphosisPart 3
19
Continued Metamorphosis
  • Getting sicker and sicker because of his fathers
    actions. Family opens a door so he can hear them
    talk in the evenings, but no one removes the
    apple.
  • that old dung-beetle (wingless grub to
    hardworking to vile to divine)
  • The term insults Gregor, but this is the only
    person who accepts him in this form
  • Appreciating music heightened senses and/or
    dreamlike perspective with a very human spiritual
    awakening
  • Death by self-imposed starvation, sacrifice

20
The Actions of the Family and Boarders
  • The boarders definitely are comedic characters,
    but also have a horrifying one-ness about them.
    They are much like the business world that
    Gregor has had to deal with as a salesman
    demanding, work in packs with the same mentality,
    and with no concern over hurt feelings.
  • Grete reaches her breaking point. Theres
    importance in what she says about Gregor during
    her rant. She says he isnt Gregor but just a
    monster, and yet, she thinks that he should
    have used human insight and sympathy to leave his
    family and never return.
  • Father and Mother turn into Mr. and Mrs. Samsa.
    More estranged.
  • Note, the trio were able to write excuses lies
    to get out of work when Gregor died. Recall that
    Gregor was unable to do this as a salesman.
  • The end appears happy and splendid, but look
    again. The mother and father are urging Grete
    into finding a husband. Her and her brothers
    dream for her was for her to go to a Conservatory
    school.
  • Her parents may be starting to dehumanize
    her just like her brother.
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