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KafkaKafka

Kafka1996

Elizabeth Boa

About this book

Elizabeth Boa's new study of Kafka centres on gender. It shows how, in an age of reactionary hysteria, Kafka rejected patriarchy yet exploited women as literary raw material. Drawing on Kafka's letters to his fiancee and to the Czech journalist, Milena Jesenska, Boa illuminates the transformation of details of everyday life into the strange yet uncannily familiar signs which are Kafka's stylistic hallmark. Kafka: Gender, Class, and Race in the Letters and Fictions argues that gender cannot be isolated from other dimensions of identity. The study relates Kafka's alienating images of the male body and fascinated disgust of female sexuality to the body-culture of the early twentieth century and to interfusing militaristic, racist, gender, and class ideologies. This is the context too for the stereotypes of the New Woman, the massive Matriarch, the lower-class seductress, and the assimilating Jew. The book explores Kafka's exploitation yet subversion of such stereotypes through the brilliant literary devices which assure his place in the modernist canon.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL2980375W

Subjects

Austrian AuthorsAuthors, AustrianCorrespondenceGender identity in literatureJews in literaturePolitical and social viewsSex in literatureSocial classes in literatureKafka, franz, 1883-1924Literary criticism - general & miscellaneousSociety & culture in literature20th century german literature - literary criticismSocial classes - general & miscellaneousGender identity

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HardcoverOpen Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.