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Discussion starts April 1st...really.
You should have posted that one hour and five minutes ago.
Talking about his humor,I found this funny but realistic also page 5,I am somewhere in the middle of the book right now.
So far - so good.
I really like his type of humor. It reminds me of the Monty Python
I am also under impression that he is his own judge and that he is creating the whole process for himself. There is a little bureaucrat in him that just doesn’t want to let him live his life.
But the question is how he got into such mind set. Did he have tough parents or something like that?
I mean generally why people are so tough on themselves. Is it society that shapes us like that?
Their certainty is possible only because of their stupidity
Talking about his humor,I found this funny but realistic also page 5,
Their certainty is possible only because of their stupidity
And of course, the bigger joke is that K himself, thinking he's so much smarter, doesn't see that the joke is on him. All of Kafka's protagonists are fate's chewtoys, and if they were as clever as they themselves think, then... they'd still be royally screwed, but at least they would realise it a lot sooner.
Here's a question for those who have read both stories: If Josef K were put in the machine from In The Penal Colony, what crime would be carved into his back?
And of course, the bigger joke is that K himself, thinking he's so much smarter, doesn't see that the joke is on him. All of Kafka's protagonists are fate's chewtoys, and if they were as clever as they themselves think, then... they'd still be royally screwed, but at least they would realise it a lot sooner.
Here's a question for those who have read both stories: If Josef K were put in the machine from In The Penal Colony, what crime would be carved into his back?
I read The Penal Colony last night. Is it considered a short story? cause it could be a good one for discussion.
I agree.
Obviously he is a spoiled son of a rich father. He has lived comfortably all his life and got all he ever wanted.
His biggest problem might be his vanity - he is so above all the others.I haven’t read the Penal Colony but might try it later.
That's good.I will make a thread.Definitely, on both counts.
BTW i don't think he is spoiled son of a rich father.He mention he lost him very young(maybe rich??)and in the additions there is a visit to his mother but does not seem very important.
Kafka was born into a middle-class, German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, the capital of Bohemia, a kingdom that was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. His father, Hermann Kafka (1852–1931), was described by Kafka himself as "a true Kafka in strength, health, appetite, loudness of voice, eloquence, self-satisfaction, worldly dominance, endurance, presence of mind, [and] knowledge of human nature ...".
It is generally agreed that Kafka suffered from clinical depression and social anxiety throughout his entire life. He also suffered from migraines, insomnia, constipation, boils, and other ailments, all usually brought on by excessive stresses and strains.
He was always inclined to take life as lightly as he could, to cross bridges when he came to them, pay no heed for the future, even when everything seemed under threat. But here that did not seem the right thing to do.
So these were the lawyer's methods, which K. fortunately had not been exposed to for long, to let the client forget about the whole world and leave him with nothing but the hope of reaching the end of his trial by this deluded means. He was no longer a client, he was the lawyer's dog.
he did not know what the charge was or even what consequences it might bring, so that he had to remember every tiny action and event from the whole of his life, looking at them from all sides and checking and reconsidering them. It was also a very disheartening job. It would have been more suitable as a way of passing the long days after he had retired and become senile.
There's nothing you can do as a group where the court's concerned. Each case is examined separately, the court is very painstaking. So there's nothing to be achieved by forming into a group, only sometimes an individual will achieve something in secret; and it's only when that's been done the others learn about it; nobody knows how it was done. So there's no sense of togetherness, you meet people now and then in the waiting rooms, but we don't talk much there. The superstitious beliefs were established a long time ago and they spread all by themselves.
"Don't get me wrong," said the priest, "I'm just pointing out the different opinions about it. You shouldn't pay too much attention to people's opinions. The text cannot be altered, and the various opinions are often no more than an expression of despair over it."
Great review BG.A real achevement for the trial is not an easy book to analyse and summerise.A bit like poetry,it can lead to endless speculation.It really helped me some sense out of it.
I often imagine the film adaptation of the novels i read,The trial would deffenetly be directed by Terry Gilliam.