Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Kafka’s writing and our reading
- 2 A psychoanalytic reading of The Man who Disappeared
- 3 The exploration of the modern city in The Trial
- 4 The Castle
- 5 Kafka’s short fiction
- 6 Kafka’s later stories and aphorisms
- 7 The letters and diaries
- 8 The case for a political reading
- 9 Kafka and Jewish folklore
- 10 Kafka and gender
- 11 Myths and realities in Kafka biography
- 12 Editions, translations, adaptations
- 13 Kafka adapted to film
- 14 Kafka and popular culture
- Index
- Series List
10 - Kafka and gender
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Kafka’s writing and our reading
- 2 A psychoanalytic reading of The Man who Disappeared
- 3 The exploration of the modern city in The Trial
- 4 The Castle
- 5 Kafka’s short fiction
- 6 Kafka’s later stories and aphorisms
- 7 The letters and diaries
- 8 The case for a political reading
- 9 Kafka and Jewish folklore
- 10 Kafka and gender
- 11 Myths and realities in Kafka biography
- 12 Editions, translations, adaptations
- 13 Kafka adapted to film
- 14 Kafka and popular culture
- Index
- Series List
Summary
Kafka configures gender roles in both familiar and unexpected ways. His characters, despite certain conformities with the stereotypes of his age, are in flux, calling to mind Otto Weininger's scale of masculinity and femininity. Gender boundaries in Kafka's writings of all periods are indistinct as are boundaries between species. For Kafka one is not born male or female, to paraphrase Simone de Beauvoir, one becomes one or the other or sometimes a mixture of the two.
As a recent critic has pointed out, his approach to gender was tied up closely with Jewish thinking on the subject. A close look at earlier and later works will reveal also that he did not revise his concepts of gender relations over time, contrary to Klaus Theweleit's assertion that by 1922 Kafka had achieved an understanding of women based on individuality, but rather that he 'de-essentialised' gender all along. Kafka derived gender models from a variety of sources all of which he approached in a critical, detached way. The diversity of the available models allowed him to recognize the relativity of each and, as Theweleit notes, to escape the exclusively heterosexual model which admits ‘only victors and victims . . . (not men and women)’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Kafka , pp. 169 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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