Saturday, February 01, 2025

from Kafka: A World of Truth Giorgio

 "Everywhere I go, I find a poet has been there before me."

- Sigmund Freud


"I have decided to stick with love. Hate is too great a burden to bear."
- Martin Luther King

“Nabokov describes writing as a kind of game between — not the characters and the page, but the readers and the author. I love that idea and think of it as a very participatory, playful thing, not as talking down to the reader.”



Kafka again. Why? A hundred years after his death, he has not lost one iota of his fascination, and that in itself is a problem. Few writers have enjoyed the fate of becoming an adjective; fewer still have names and adjectives that spill over from the literary field to immediately create, in whatever context, a “specific emotional atmosphere”: Kafka, it is said, describes the condition of contemporary man; he foresaw the inevitable rise of totalitarian regimes; he reveals the true nature of increasingly bureaucratised and dehumanised societies. 
According to the description in Wikipedia, his work “typically features isolated protagonists facing bizarre or surrealistic predicaments and incomprehensible socio-bureaucratic powers. It has been interpreted as exploring themes of alienation, existential anxiety, guilt, and absurdity.”