Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations for Kafka Citations
- Introduction
- 1 Running Texts, Stunning Drafts
- 2 “Torturing the Gordian Knot”: Kafka and Metaphor
- 3 Nietzsche and Kafka: The Dionysian Connection
- 4 What Kafka Learned from Flaubert: “Absent-Minded Window-Gazing” and “The Judgment”
- 5 Kafka’s Racial Melancholy
- 6 Strange Loops and the Absent Center in The Castle
- 7 Proxies in Kafka: Koncipist FK and Prokurist Josef K.
- 8 Kafka, Goffman, and the Total Institution
- 9 Kafka in Virilio’s Teletopical City
- 10 Kafka’s Visual Method: The Gaze, the Cinematic, and the Intermedial
- 11 “Samsa war Reisender”: Trains, Trauma, and the Unreadable Body
- 12 The Comfort of Strangeness: Correlating the Kafkaesque and the Kafkan in Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Unconsoled
- 13 Kafka’s Journey into the Future: Crossing Borders into Israeli/Palestinian Worlds
- 14 Kafka and Italy: A New Perspective on the Italian Literary Landscape
- Bibliography
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
2 - “Torturing the Gordian Knot”: Kafka and Metaphor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations for Kafka Citations
- Introduction
- 1 Running Texts, Stunning Drafts
- 2 “Torturing the Gordian Knot”: Kafka and Metaphor
- 3 Nietzsche and Kafka: The Dionysian Connection
- 4 What Kafka Learned from Flaubert: “Absent-Minded Window-Gazing” and “The Judgment”
- 5 Kafka’s Racial Melancholy
- 6 Strange Loops and the Absent Center in The Castle
- 7 Proxies in Kafka: Koncipist FK and Prokurist Josef K.
- 8 Kafka, Goffman, and the Total Institution
- 9 Kafka in Virilio’s Teletopical City
- 10 Kafka’s Visual Method: The Gaze, the Cinematic, and the Intermedial
- 11 “Samsa war Reisender”: Trains, Trauma, and the Unreadable Body
- 12 The Comfort of Strangeness: Correlating the Kafkaesque and the Kafkan in Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Unconsoled
- 13 Kafka’s Journey into the Future: Crossing Borders into Israeli/Palestinian Worlds
- 14 Kafka and Italy: A New Perspective on the Italian Literary Landscape
- Bibliography
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Yes, torturing is extremely important to me…. Torturing is pathetic too, of course. After all, Alexander didn’t torture the Gordian knot when it wouldn’t come untied.
— KafkaWhat, then, is truth? A mobile army of metaphors, metonyms, and anthromorphisms.
— NietzscheALTHOUGH KAFKA DISTRUSTS his own gift for metaphor, he resorts to metaphorical language both in his fiction and in his autobiographical writings. Metaphors occur to him in what W. B. Yeats called the “foul rag and bone shop of the heart,” and his fiction often germinates from intensely personal images. We can watch him experimenting in his diaries with a tangle of often tormented images, which he, metaphorically of course, likens to the Gordian knot.
In Kafka studies, where there has been much discussion about metaphor, the pendulum can swing too far, obliterating the partial validity of previous perspectives. Thanks to Stanley Corngold, few of us are now likely to accept without qualification Günther Anders’s once widely accepted notion that Kafka’s narratives are literalized metaphors. Yet if we carry this rejection of the role of figurative language to extremes, we risk losing sight of Kafka’s gift for metaphor. This debate in Kafka studies parallels the lively discussions about metaphor in recent decades, not only in literary studies but also in philosophy, linguistics, and cognitive science. Heeding the philosopher Paul Ricoeur’s insistence on the need to recognize “the place and role of feeling in the metaphorical process,” I shall focus here on the manner in which Kafka brings self-conscious craft to bear on intimate obsessions, thereby transforming private images into enduring metaphors.
Kafka’s explicit comments about metaphor might admittedly seem to undermine the case for the centrality of metaphor in his creative process. His criticism of images can be trenchant, as in the often-quoted diary entry of 6 December 1922, prompted by a metaphor in a letter in which he had likened writing to a fire that gives off warmth:
Metaphors are one among many things which make me despair of writing. Writing’s lack of independence of the world, its dependence on the maid who tends the fire, on the cat warming itself by the stove. . . . All these are independent activities ruled by their own laws; only writing is helpless, cannot live in itself, is fun and despair.
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- Kafka for the Twenty-First Century , pp. 48 - 63Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2011