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Das Leben Franz Kafkas (1984)

von Ernst Pawel

Weitere Autoren: Siehe Abschnitt Weitere Autoren.

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
347473,957 (4)2
A comprehensive and interpretative biography of Franz Kafka that is both a monumental work of scholarship and a vivid, lively evocation of Kafka's world.
  1. 00
    Der andere Prozess : Kafkas Briefe an Felice von Elias Canetti (gust)
  2. 00
    Leben mit dem Stern von Jiří Weil (gust)
    gust: Allebei over het leven van joden in Praag.Het ene historisch over de joden als groep, het andere (Weil)een fictief verhaal over een jood in Praag.
  3. 00
    Die Welt von gestern von Stefan Zweig (gust)
    gust: Beide boeken handelen voor een stuk over het leven van de joden in Praag.
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Published in 1985, Ernst Pawel's "The Nightmare of Reason" was only the second meritorious English-language biography of Franz Kafka to be published. Reviewer's consider it to be superior to its predecessor, Ronald Hayman's "Kafka".

One of the strengths of Pawel's account is that it puts Kafka's life in the context of the social and political environment of Prague and the conflicts between Czechs, Germans, and Jews. Indeed, he gives special attention to Kafka's Jewish heritage. His account of Kafka's life and times is well balanced. It avoids the small errors that permeate Hayman's biography, while helping rebut the Kafka mythology that has sprung up around the author. Nevertheless, Pawel makes the mistake of trying to fill in the enormous gaps in what we know with questionable inferences and amateur psychologizing. For example, we're told that Kafka's mother "was far too rigid and deprived to express love... and he (Franz) hated her for it." Really? What evidence do we have for such a claim? As for his notably difficult relationship with his father, Pawel speaks of Franz as "a brooding and sardonic stranger with his dark grey eyes and eloquently ironic silences (which) mocked and tormented him (his father) in his own home." Such leaps of imagination owe more to literary license than to a penchant for accuracy. A further issue is that Pawel sees Kafka's writings as a foreshadowing of the coming brutal bureaucracy of the Nazi state... as if Kafka was somehow prescient about what was to come, a decade after his death in 1924.

This biography, like Hayman's, have been vastly superseded by Reiner Stach's magisterial, 3 volume work. With such a scholarly and readable tome now available, any other biographical attempt may seem to shrink to irrelevancy. However, for readers seeking a single- volume account of Kafka's life, Pawel's "Nightmare..." has its attractions. For alternatives that are still shorter, Robertson’s “Kafka: A Very Short Introduction” and Jeremy Adler’s nicely illustrated “Franz Kafka” are highly recommended. ( )
2 abstimmen danielx | Aug 10, 2019 |
This biography provides good insight into Kafka's life and world. I don't know that it is essential to an understanding and enjoyment (?) of Kafka's work, but it is quite interesting, nevertheless. ( )
  datrappert | Nov 30, 2013 |
Très bien écrit mais trop long! Il faut avoir énormément de patience et d'intérêt pour vraiment lire toutes les 600 pages du livre.
L'auteur écrit merveilleusement bien mais s'étend trop .. ( )
  sweetwood1 | Feb 5, 2012 |
FOR THE LOVE OF GENIUS AND FRANZ KAFKA

Few twentieth century authors have had as widespread an impact on modern literature as Franz Kafka. Even fewer biographers have managed to serve their subject so well as Ernst Pawel does the eternally enigmatic Kafka in THE NIGHTMARE OF REASON: A LIFE OF FRANZ KAFKA.

If ever the term "tortured genius" was applicable to one of the giants of literary history, it was without question to the Prague-born Jewish author Franz Kafka. Born July 3, 1883, to this day Kafka is celebrated worldwide for the seemingly bizarre, amorphous, surrealistic, and yet pin-point precise writing that characterizes such classics as his novels The Trial and The Castle, and his story Metamorphosis. What most readers don't realize, and what Ernst Pawel makes so stunningly clear in The Nightmare of Reason, is that Kafka's phenomenal work represents a true-to-life rendering of the emotional trauma, religious persecution, political oppression, and physical anguish he suffered throughout his life.

In the course of weaving together the historical and spiritual threads that bound the different elements of Kafka's existence, Pawel sheds much-needed light on one of the most famous father-son relationships in literary culture. In his wisdom, Pawel illustrates how both Franz and his father Hermann Kafka were largely products of their political and social times--an era that saw the unapologetic murderous oppression of Jews in Europe, ongoing debates over Zionism, and eruptions of war around the globe. How father and son adapted as individuals to these issues created between them walls too thick and tall to work their way around. Moreover, his mother Julie's need to make herself more available to her husband as a business partner and comrade than to her only son and her daughters did little to heal the future author's sense of abandonment in a terrifyingly tumultuous world.

If Kafka had had only his family's collective angst and Prague's political instability to cope with, he would have been immersed in the same kind of life conditions that many writers revel in to create their best work. His situation, however, was a far more complex one. Despite a healthy appreciation for sexual enjoyments, he nevertheless distrusted the deeper levels of binding emotional intimacy. In addition, he was prone to contracting illnesses rarely heard of outside Biblical times and accentuated the pain of these with an acute hypochondria.

The grace with which Kafka navigated chronic illnesses, held down a demanding job as an insurance claims administrator, pursued serious literary ambitions, and compassionately addressed the needs of others, made him appear more than human in the eyes of some. That his biological clock seemed to stop around the age of 20 did little to persuade them differently. Even months before his death at the age of 40, his countenance was more that of a youth curious about whatever surprises life might hold than it was that of a middle-aged man who had weathered his share of brutal storms, not the least of which was maintaining commitment to his literary art.

In his biography of the author, Pawel allows readers to feel the full weight of pain in Kafka's life so we come to understand what it means for a dedicated writer of his caliber to struggle past the agony of accumulated wounds and transform unrelenting affliction--if not into ecstasy capable of saving the life of the writer, then at least into art capable of inspiring humanity to address the danger of its absurd and deadly vanities. Kafka once put it this way: "Anyone who cannot come to terms with his life while he is alive needs one hand to ward off a little of his despair over his fate... but with his other hand he can note down what he sees among the ruins."

As much as he was beset by demons or sorrow throughout his years on the planet, Kafka was also blessed by the company of such angels as his courageous younger sister Ottla, his legendary off-and-on-again fiancé Felice Bauer, the famed political journalist Milena Jesenska, and the passionately devoted Dora Diamant. Just as he empowered each with his knowledge and influence, so did each in turn serve as sources of strength and refuge in his many hours of profound need. In his account of their place in Kafka's life, there's never a need for Pawel to exaggerate because the humbling facts speak so persuasively for themselves.

Had it not been for his friend Max Brod, few people outside European literary circles would likely have ever heard of Kafka. It was Brod who first recognized Kafka's genius, Brod who secured publication outlets for that genius, and he who later wrote the first biography on his friend, all while producing dozens of volumes of original writings himself. His most significant role in the Kafka story as the world knows it today is that of the man who defied his friend's instructions to destroy his unpublished works after his death, which occurred at noon on June 3, 1924. Brod did the exact opposite, editing and publishing as much as he could, in the process providing the world with two of its most enduring classics. If the act may be described as a betrayal of trust, it may also be interpreted as a towering testimony to a rare kind of friendship.

As amazing as The Nightmare of Reason is for its full-dimensional treatment of Kafka, it is equally so for Pawel's examination of the roots of modern anti-Semitism. The insights gleaned from his account of the irrational fears and exaggerated accusations that eventually gave rise to the Holocaust are not without their use in 2007. Consequently, reading the book is not only an excellent way to explore the creative depths and historical substance that produced Kafka's art. It is also a powerful way to reexamine those tendencies which lead humanity to blindly destroy that which it does not easily understand, and to reclaim the ability to transform fear into knowledge, then knowledge into the power to heal, and healing into a greater capacity for love.

by Author-Poet Aberjhani
author of "The Harlem Renaissance Way Down South"
and "Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance" (Facts on File Library of American History) ( )
3 abstimmen Aberjhani | Jul 2, 2007 |
Pawel remedies many of the problems of earlier biographical efforts on Kafka and adds something valuable and unique: a more plausible picture of Kafka in the context of his daily work as an administrator in an insurance company. The side of this we already know well—how Kafka hated the necessity of devoting time and attention to such nonliterary work—is balanced by Pawels picture of Kafka's substantial success in the career he resented so deeply. Pawel also corrects any illusions we might retain about Kafka's character: "Kafka, weak and incompetent, was also strong in his solitary dreams, infinitely determined and well defended in his loneliness. He was gentle, kind, considerate, and he could use words as a weapon, draw blood with a glancing phrase."
 
What distinguishes ''The Nightmare of Reason'' is not so much its clearheaded contentiousness as the marvelously lucid way it paints and frames the contexts of Kafka's life and times. … One key to Kafka, as far as Mr. Pawel is concerned, is that he was ''a Jew from Prague'' - a fact that some commentators have tried to fudge. As such he was condemned to be the quintessentially alienated Western man, but nevertheless found in the German tongue a language he sharpened to the point of an ice pick in his writing. Language is the essence of his fiction, Mr. Pawel argues; never mind the exegetes who want to reduce his stories to parables and political messages.
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (9 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Ernst PawelHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Perry, JosÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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A comprehensive and interpretative biography of Franz Kafka that is both a monumental work of scholarship and a vivid, lively evocation of Kafka's world.

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