The Reception of the Life and Work of Franz Kafka in Philip Roth’s Non-Fiction Writings
The Reception of the Life and Work of Franz Kafka in Philip Roth’s Non-Fiction Writings
Author(s): Michal SýkoraSubject(s): Jewish studies, Studies of Literature, Czech Literature, American Literature
Published by: Univerzita Karlova v Praze - Filozofická fakulta, Vydavatelství
Keywords: Franz Kafka; Philip Roth; Ivan Klíma; American literature; Czech literature; totalitarian regime
Summary/Abstract: Philip Roth made no secret of his great admiration for the work of Franz Kafka, which ultimately brought him to Prague in the 1970s and fostered his interest in Czech culture. This contribution focuses on the reception of the personality and work of Franz Kafka in Philip Roth’s non-fiction writing. The first section focuses on Roth’s essential Kafkaesque essay ‘“I Always Wanted You to Admire My Fasting”; or Looking at Kafka’ from 1973, in which Roth combines an empathetic portrait of his favourite author with a counterfactual vision of Kafka’s life, in which the author of the Trial and the Castle did not die of tuberculosis and instead fled from the Holocaust to the United States, where he became Roth’s uncle. In the second section, based on Roth’s dialogue with Ivan Klíma from 1990, we document how Kafka serves Roth in his reflections on the position and role of the writer in society.
Journal: Slovo a smysl
- Issue Year: 19/2022
- Issue No: 39
- Page Range: 242-249
- Page Count: 8
- Language: English