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Franz Kafka: The Office Writings brings together, for the first
time in English, Kafka's most interesting professional writings,
composed during his years as a high-ranking lawyer with the largest
Workmen's Accident Insurance Institute in the Czech Lands of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Franz Kafka (1883-1924) is commonly
recognized as the greatest German prose writer of the twentieth
century. It is less well known that he had an established legal
career. Kafka's briefs reveal him to be a canny bureaucrat, sharp
litigator, and innovative thinker on the social, political, and
legal issues of his time. His official preoccupations inspired many
of the themes and strategies of the novels and stories he wrote at
night. These documents include articles on workmen's compensation
and workplace safety; appeals for the founding of a psychiatric
hospital for shell-shocked veterans; and letters arguing
relentlessly for a salary adequate to his merit. In adjudicating
disputes, promoting legislative programs, and investigating
workplace sites, Kafka's writings teem with details about the
bureaucracy and technology of his day, such as spa elevators in
Marienbad, the challenge of the automobile, and the perils of
excavating in quarries while drunk. Beautifully translated, with
valuable commentary by two of the world's leading Kafka scholars
and one of America's most eminent civil rights lawyers, the
documents cast rich light on the man and the writer and offer new
insights to lovers of Kafka's novels and stories.
Franz Kafka: The Ghosts in the Machine adds an original critical
framework to the work begun by Stanley Corngold and Benno Wagner in
their monumental collection Franz Kafka: The Office Writings
(2008). It is widely acknowledged that Kafka's daytime occupation
as a specialist in industrial accident insurance contributed in a
significant way to his fiction.
Corngold and Wagner frame Kafka's writings as cultural events, each
work reflecting the economic and cultural discourses of his epoch.
In pursuing Kafka's avowed interest in the theory and practice of
insurance, the authors view the two systems of his literary
worlds--the official and the personal--as a "bundling" together of
the various cultural accidents of Kafka's time. The work of two of
the leading scholars of the single most influential writer of
literary modernity, Franz Kafka: The Ghosts in the Machine
constitutes a breathtakingly original advance in the study of both
the more famous and less well-known works of this enigmatic master.
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