Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Kafka’s Works by Year of First Appearance, With Date of First English Translation
- Abbreviations of Kafka’s Works
- Introduction: Kafka Begins
- Critical Editions I: The 1994 Paperback Edition
- Critical Editions II: Will the Real Franz Kafka Please Stand Up?
- Beyond Self-Assertion: A Life of Reading Kafka
- Kafka before Kafka: The Early Stories
- Tradition and Betrayal in “Das Urteil”
- Kafka as Anti-Christian: “Das Urteil,” “Die Verwandlung,” and the Aphorisms
- Kafka’s Aesthetics: A Primer: From the Fragments to the Novels
- Medial Allusions at the Outset of Der Proceß; or, res in media
- Kafka’s Circus Turns: “Auf der Galerie” and “Erstes Leid”
- Kafka and Postcolonial Critique: Der Verschollene, “In der Strafkolonie,” “Beim Bau der chinesischen Mauer”
- Disjunctive Signs: Semiotics, Aesthetics, and Failed Mediation in “In der Strafkolonie”
- Hunting Kafka Out of Season: Enigmatics in the Short Fictions
- A Dream of Jewishness Denied: Kafka’s Tumor and “Ein Landarzt”
- Surveying The Castle: Kafka’s Colonial Visions
- Making Everything “a little uncanny”: Kafka’s Deletions in the Manuscript of Das Schloß and What They Can Tell Us About His Writing Process
- Kafka Imagines His Readers: The Rhetoric of “Josefine die Sängerin” and “Der Bau”
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Kafka’s Circus Turns: “Auf der Galerie” and “Erstes Leid”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Kafka’s Works by Year of First Appearance, With Date of First English Translation
- Abbreviations of Kafka’s Works
- Introduction: Kafka Begins
- Critical Editions I: The 1994 Paperback Edition
- Critical Editions II: Will the Real Franz Kafka Please Stand Up?
- Beyond Self-Assertion: A Life of Reading Kafka
- Kafka before Kafka: The Early Stories
- Tradition and Betrayal in “Das Urteil”
- Kafka as Anti-Christian: “Das Urteil,” “Die Verwandlung,” and the Aphorisms
- Kafka’s Aesthetics: A Primer: From the Fragments to the Novels
- Medial Allusions at the Outset of Der Proceß; or, res in media
- Kafka’s Circus Turns: “Auf der Galerie” and “Erstes Leid”
- Kafka and Postcolonial Critique: Der Verschollene, “In der Strafkolonie,” “Beim Bau der chinesischen Mauer”
- Disjunctive Signs: Semiotics, Aesthetics, and Failed Mediation in “In der Strafkolonie”
- Hunting Kafka Out of Season: Enigmatics in the Short Fictions
- A Dream of Jewishness Denied: Kafka’s Tumor and “Ein Landarzt”
- Surveying The Castle: Kafka’s Colonial Visions
- Making Everything “a little uncanny”: Kafka’s Deletions in the Manuscript of Das Schloß and What They Can Tell Us About His Writing Process
- Kafka Imagines His Readers: The Rhetoric of “Josefine die Sängerin” and “Der Bau”
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
AM I A CIRCUS RIDER ON 2 HORSES?” Kafka concludes a letter to Felice Bauer on 7 October 1916, and adds with regret: “Alas, I am no rider, but lie prostrate on the ground.” (“Bin ich ein Cirkusreiter auf 2 Pferden? Leider bin ich kein Reiter, sondern liege am Boden.” [F 720]). The circus seems to defy even the basic rules of balance, while Kafka, trying to establish a precarious equilibrium between his everyday life and his writing, time and again loses his footing.
Kafka regularly patronized the Prague varietés and cabarets (Wagenbach 155) and was an avid reader of two journals on circus culture, Artist: Central-Organ des Circus, der Varietébühnen, reisenden Kapellen und Ensembles, and its Austrian counterpart Proscenium (Bauer-Wabnegg 1986, 10). Well-informed references to the popular art form of the circus and its various types of performances pervade his literary writings, notes, and letters. In the diaries and the Oktavhefte, he mentions aquatic pantomime — which had been introduced by Ernst Renz in 1891 and had also been a great success for the Busch circus — and notes his admiration for the great juggler “K” and for the acrobatic skill of a contortionist. In “Ein Hungerkünstler” (A Hunger Artist) and Der Verschollene, he emphasizes the inclusive aspect of the circus institution, which welcomes all kinds of different artistic skills: “Ein großer Zirkus mit seiner Unzahl von einander immer wieder ausgleichenden und ergänzenden Menschen und Tieren und Apparaten kann jeden und zu jeder Zeit gebrauchen” (L 269; “A large circus with its enormous traffic in replacing and recruiting men, animals, and apparatus can always find a use for people at any time,” CollS 228). Kafka’s Hunger Artist is modeled on the human skeletons exhibited in sideshows (Bauer-Wabnegg 1990, 374). The anthropomorphized ape Rotpeter in “Bericht für eine Akademie” (Report to an Academy) recalls the enfreaked bodies and people exhibited before the Berlin Anthropological Society in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries; the case of Krao, a putative ape-girl who was purported to be the missing evolutionary link between nature and culture, was discussed in the popular journal Die Gartenlaube in 1888 and put on show at the Frankfurt Zoological Gardens in 1884 and 1894 (Rothfels).
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- A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka , pp. 171 - 186Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002
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