Franz Kafka (reaktion Books - Critical Lives) Site

A core argument in Gilman's Franz Kafka (Critical Lives) is that Kafka’s prose serves as a window into his ongoing struggle to define himself within a society that often viewed the Jewish body through a lens of stereotypes and "modern" illness.

: Gilman argues that works like In the Penal Colony and The Trial can be read as immediate reactions to major contemporary events, such as the Dreyfus Affair . Franz Kafka (Reaktion Books - Critical Lives)

In his contribution to the series, Sander L. Gilman offers a succinct and penetrating biography that bridges the gap between Franz Kafka’s complex internal life and the "Kafkaesque" world of his fiction. Rather than treating Kafka as a detached, mystical figure, Gilman grounds him in the cultural anxieties of early 20th-century Central Europe, focusing specifically on how Kafka’s identity as a Jew and his relationship with his own body shaped his writing. The "Body" as a Central Theme A core argument in Gilman's Franz Kafka (Critical