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
Medial Allusions at the Outset of Der Proceß; or, res in media
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
“Schuldig ist die Organisation”
FROM THE OUTSET, the narrative of Der Proceß (The Trial) displays medial variations of more than one kind. The basic medial intrusion is theater. This theatrical performance includes (“intermediates”), however, a second and a third medial instance: first, popular literature, especially travel literature; and second, the consciousness of the archive, of the very manuscript from which the diegesis, the world of the novel, emerges. Kafka’s seemingly inexhaustible ability to enact and dramatize modes of presentation (Vorstellung) and of reading includes even the kinds of critical attention paid to his work by readers having a fully saturated consciousness of media. “Types of Kafka interpretation can be identified and their validity measured by a scrutiny of the work, which unfolds as the adventurous combat of principles authorizing interpretations” (Corngold, The Commentators’ Despair v). This sentence was written in 1973. Some thirty years later — after guerilla theater; after the emergent claim that modernism in literature is defined by its absorption of popular culture; above all, after the expansion of the electronic archive — this point about Kafka’s wide consciousness of the formal, medial constraints on interpretation still seems correct.
In Der Proceß, the scenic element of theater (“die Schaustellung” [the “show”]; “die Komödie” [the “farce”]: P 12; Tr 7) is penetrated throughout by a scriptive element (“das in Schrift Gestellte” [that which is put in writing], “das Buch” [the book]: P 9; “das Schriftstück,” “die Papiere” [the papers]: P 12). Here the problematic imbrication of the visible Court and the (in principle) readable Law is enacted by the crossing of the media — the visible and the readable — res in media. The outcome of this scriptive medial intrusion will be — not the “clarification” (“Klarstellung”: P 22, Tr 14) that K. requires — but, rather, his being stabbed to death.
Consider how these medial interferences play out. From the very first page, Der Proceß is a play within a narrative. On awakening, Josef K. is “put out” (“befremdet”: P 7, Tr 3) not to have been brought his breakfast: it is past eight o’clock and Anna the cook, a holdover from “Die Verwandlung” (The Metamorphosis), usually brings him his breakfast before eight o’clock. Upon noting this absence of cook and breakfast, K. does immediately notice the presence of something.
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- A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka , pp. 149 - 170Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002