( tänkerjagdå ) Mitt namn är Kaj Bernh. Genell. Jag är en göteborgare, född 1944. Jag skriver en del o. har bland annat skrivit romaner, flera deckare, noveller, en bok om Kafka, samt en bok om Ironi. Flera romaner är på engelska. Böckerna finns på Adlibris, Bokus. Vissa finns enbart på Amazon. Läs gärna mer på mina hemsidor: www.kajgenell.com & www.tegelkrona.com Jag är - vad gäller littertur - emot det pretentiösa, men för det preciost ironiska.
söndag 15 september 2024
lördag 14 september 2024
What does Kafka mean today?
What does Kafka mean today?
Kaj
Bernhard Genell 2023
What was unique about Kafka?
Kafka – as a
matter of fact - used high-Romantic Ästhetik des Schwebens and without
this reference to the Romantic Tradition, there would have been no Kafkaesque.
The Kafkawsque – of course – is what most of all interests us, when it comes to
Kafka.
But
what - then - is meant by the term "Kafkaesque"? We are - as our
prime object of study - looking into this Concept.
THUS Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
is an analysis of Kafka's novels and short stories, with special regard to the
concept of the Kafkaesque. This book concentrates on understanding what
contributed to the famous Kafka effect. The author explains the structural
triplicity of a discourse seen as consciousness. It also describes how Freud,
Romantic irony, and Symbolistic literature simultaneously co-work as the
mythical subtext of Kafka's work. Kafka created something that would become
part of defining Modern Man. Understanding Kafka is the road to understanding
Modernity.
Many a Dissertation and many an Essay on Kafka have
dealt with the strange "dreamlike character" or effect of
Kafka´s novels and short stories. This has always been dealt with as if the
"kafkaesque" was brought into the game by someone adding
"Freudian symbols" to something. Nothing could be further from the
truth! This is what Genell´s book Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
(2021) shows.
Rather, the case is this:
Kafka's structural, literary form is based upon a refined mega-structural
narrative split.
It is the split between subject-"voice" and object-"voice"
on the one hand, and human conscious and uncons©ious mind, on the other. This
is not easy either to describe or to understand! The uniqueness of the works of
Franz Kafka and the perplexing historical accuracy of the concept of Kafkaesque
are both phenomena that many readers and scholars have noticed over the years.
Through the years, a fruitful explanation of the uniqueness and accuracy of
these works has been missing.
Scholars have ever from the 1930ies been noticing the extraordinary qualities
of Kafka text. Strange - Kafkaesque - features have been attributed to the
short stories and the novels of Kafka. The Kafka hero has - rightly - been seen
as a mere figure, and the “dream-like” landscape universe has been seen as a
characteristic, and one has frequently been looking upon these entities,
together with a few stylistic features, as technical dominants in the shaping
of the concept of the Kafkaesque.
Genell´s Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis displays
a model, together with a biographical survey and a historical perspective on
possible influences, that, reversely, forms a hermeneutic, actual explanation of
these features, as well as to what is denoted by the concept, from the
perspective of a dynamic contextual center, explained in a model containing
three levels, levels forming the discourse, typical of Kafka.
This book tries to unravel the enigma of the concept by reference to the
process of creation and by Kafka´s implicit use of TWO unconscious levels
within the universe of his most important works. The veil of mystery may never
be lifted regarding Kafka´s eerie classics of Modernity like it will never be
lifted when it comes to literature as a whole. Still, it might be essential -
in order not to fall into any metaphysical trap - to know about the technique
behind the Kafkaesque to be able to reflect upon the Self-Consciousness of
Modern Man of the 20ieth century, a century so intensely marked by a dialogue
between society and the works and ideas of Sigmund Freud. Self-consciousness of
Man, as it appeared with St. Augustine, the great Italian Renaissance writers,
Erasmus, Shakespeare, Montaigne, the German secular Romantics, and Hegel,
swiftly developed into something even much more complex with the appearance of
Freud and the groundbreaking publication of his Traumdeutung in the year of
1900, and, more so, with the creation of the Kafkaesque, with the works of
Kafka, around the year of 1912. The birth of the Kafkaesque can be dated to the
night in the autumn of 1912 when Kafka wrote Das Urteil.
The book, Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
revolves solely around this strange split of ©onsciousness and its
©onsequences.
The Kafkaesque is brought about by two phenomena, and Genell
is in his book discussing only the first one.
1.) A literary trick, built upon a split Unconscious ( strange as it of course
may sound, and difficult -) and
2.) a unique mental sensibility.
WHAT IF one had a Dream of
a Dream and the two of them could communicate?? That is what happens in a Franz
Kafka story! The book Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
deals with Kafka's novels and short stories from the aspect of the Kafkaesque,
and it does so by looking for the means that create this effect. These means
turn out to be largely technical. Thus, this book, Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis,
shows how Kafka uses a narratological split, split consciousness, and SPLIT
Unconscious of the hero to create the Kafkaesque by a rare trick.
This new book shows how Kafka became one of the most prominent artists to
create and define Modernity. Kafka took part in the thrilling creation of
Self-conscience of the 20ieth century, marked by a constant dialogue with Freud
and his works. Self-Conscience as Man knew it since St. Augustine, the Italian
renaissance writers Erasmus, Shakespeare, and Montaigne, and later with the
secular Romantics and Hegel swiftly developed within Modernism into something
much more complex, primarily with the appearance of Freud's
"Traumdeutung" in the year of 1900. And Kafka - rebutting Schnitzler
- then set out to complete it all. The works of Kafka appeared as a reaction to
1.) Modern times, to 2.) his own personal alienation, and to 3.) Freud.
Kafka's answer to
Modernity – to the modern condition – was astonishingly complex, but it turned
out to be very accurate and accomplished right from the beginning. When other
reactions to the Modern Condition, like Hugo Ball, Appolinaire, and Dada,
displayed a picture of a chaotic and rebellious attitude to reason and morals,
Kafka, much like Rimbaud actually, showed a far more complex ability to make
modern society's human-understandable itself, in a universal narrative. Kafka,
in exploring the Unconscious, as by Freud, and in doing so using a Romantic
"Ästhetik des Schwebens," is the unique discoverer of the marvels of
mind, and is, in this, equal to Freud. Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
sets out to explain how the Kafkaesque itself generates - even today, 100 years
after its birth - an interrogation that scrutinizes the Freudian theory and our
conception of the unique human consciousness.
Kafka's relation to Freud was somewhat like a son's relation
to the father. Hence, Kafka did not acknowledge Freud's discoveries, methods,
and notions as truths. But he saw them – ironically enough – as facts. And in a
sense, they were. Freud's views were historical facts in their profound
influence on the Mind and Society of the century. Kafka used Freud as part of
the revealing of Modern Myth, and the
myths used by Modernity.
Kafka used Freud, but Kafka added on top of Freud´s model of the human psyche
another split to human consciousness in his literary universe. Kafka thus did
not "believe in" Freud, but he was fascinated by him. Freud suited
Kafka well. Almost too well. He did not look at all to Freud to a great extent,
... did not own several books by Freud ... but he had – like many others –
acquired a sort of immediate understanding of Freud's ideas through a kind of
everyday osmosis.
Kafka actually started as a writer of lyrical prose, short prose poems in the
style of Goethe, Kleist, and Flaubert. But his dream was to write a novel, and
it ought to be like the one Flaubert in his usual rage once claimed he wanted
to write: a lovely book about nothing at all. So it happened that Kafka - not
at all being highly intellectual or an eloquent philosopher - developed a
technique for writing novels where he was extending a sole situation into a
perfectly static ( i.e., nothingy ) drama displaying a struggle between
conscious and unconscious. It also seems as he tried to develop the style of
Tieck and the Romantics. Using his extraordinary ( perhaps autistic )
sensibility, Kafka's technique miraculously was born on one evening in 1912,
writing the short story "The Verdict." The following day, he even
asked his fiancée Felice for its meaning. Later, in 1912 with the writing of
"The Metamorphosis" and, in 1913, the unfinished "The
Trial," his technique of displaying the Kafkaesque was already full-fledged.
Here he – almost FORCE by his own personal and social catastrophe - introduced
a pseudo plot in a kind of pseudo novel displaying a story of a split, a
struggle of a conscious instance of a person, shown as a hero-figure battling
this person's OWN Unconscious. As it turned out, this battle caused a second
unconscious part to appear in the universe of this fiction. ( Examples can be
found in Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
.) It seems that the hero-figure, devoid of his Unconscious, HAD TO develop
such an unconscious to be able to handle his surrounding world, which was his
original Unconscious. Here we thus are having a triadic structure and a strange
meeting of two unconscious instances. This fictional condition primarily
results in a double exposure of the unconscious and a strange transcendence of
the Ego, which cannot easily be reflected upon since it has no equivalent in
reality.
This is NOT EASY TO UNDERSTAND!
As a result of this Kafka-technique, which
probably was unconscious (!) to Kafka himself, we are also – apart from the
nausea of double Unconscious, a kind of self-consciousness of the Unconscious -
experiencing a very intense poetry, depicting utter loneliness in a framework
of a sad pseudo-protest, parallel to Weber´s, against the superpower of civil
organization and law in general, as well as a hymn of the melancholy beauty of
existence the like of which nobody else in the 20ieth Century has created: The
concept of "Kafkaesque" has been created upon the experience of the
works of Kafka by the Collective Mind, and in some yet not quite analyzed way,
it also has extended our mode of perception. The concept of the Kafkaesque, and
the Kafkaesque itself, AS IRONY, is vital for both the being and the
understanding of our culture and being! The questions regarding this concept,
raised in Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis
questions somewhat elusive, are mainly two: [ 1. ]: what IS the kafkaesque?
(…that is caused by this split ) And [ 2. ]: how did Kafka DO to create this,
the" Kafkaesque"?
These questions are highly original and deal with
ideological, cultural, and psychological matters and tacit knowledge, and
complicated issues concerning the ontology of fiction. Perhaps the concept of
"Kafka" is an ongoing question in Modernity itself that will prevail
no matter how much Kaj Bernh. Genell - and others - keep trying to sort out the
problem?....
Kaj Bernh. Genell 2023.
Copyright Kaj Bernh. Genell
2023.
Kaj Bernh. Genell was born in Gothenburg,
Sweden, in 1944. After having endured an adventurous youth, he became
interested in philosophy and, in 1983, after many years at the University of
Gothenburg, published a book exclusively on existential ( in the Sartreian
sense of the word ) Irony - “Ironi och existens.” Genell here established
himself as a fighter for irony. This position was and is a rare one in Sweden.
Soon hereafter, Genell, who since his teens had a great interest in one of the
giants of Modernism, Franz Kafka, wrote a series of papers at the University of
Gothenburg related to Kafka, partly under supervision of the renowned stark
Marxist Kurt Aspelin, who then was a senior teacher and avid lecturer there.
This would later result in the now disappeared ebook “Kafka och det Kafkaeska”
(2018), an essay in Swedish on the Literary Technique of Kafka, and then later
- published in English - an extended version of this book as “Kafka - a
Freudo-Structuralist Analysis” (2021).
As a fiction writer Genell started out
with several books in the Swedish language, such as “Pistolen”, “Tavelstölden”,
“Tegelkrona och skönheten”, ”Höstdrama” and the horror story “Skjuta sig fri”. These
books – of course – have nothing to do with Kafka. Under the pseudo “ Bill
Clactoe ”, the first novel in English by Genell appeared in 2021,” called
Fell´s Point,” a small idyllic crime story set in Baltimore, USA. With “The
Lion´s Disease,” Genell has under his own name in his second English novel
created a psychological and philosophical comment on pandemics by describing an
odyssey to Indonesia on a Bulk Cargo Carrier.
- Reading a book is to look into oneself.
In 2022 Kaj Bernh. Genell became a stipendiary, by being awarded a large
sholarship from Sveriges Författarfond ( National Fund for Authors ).
www.kajgenell.com, Kaj Bernhard Genell Real
Home Site. The main subject here is Kafka and the kafkaesque and the book, Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist
Analysis.
torsdag 12 september 2024
The Censor
The problem with the reverence regarding the Freudian
Censor.
Amnesia is regulated from our innermost realm, or more
precisely, for Freudian analysts, from the Censor. Never-
theless, our inmost inner is never such that it asserts that
amnesia ought to be permanent. It is planned to be tem-
porary. Our inner world does not have absolute censor-
ship by the type: ”Such thing must not happen!” Thus it
ought to be erased from the protocol!” No, our inner has –
and we do not know why – kind of an absolute demand
for truth. Curiously enough, it has an insight in that eve-
rything A: has a value of its own, an innate value, a value
per se ( in sich ), AS OCCURRED. Moreover, B.) it also
has a mediating – instrumental – value, insofar as all
events can contribute to creating the most honourable
possible human being, for every possible length of any
life, where this inner subject is serving.
It is thus possible to imagine that the Censor always has
Death in view. Because the innermost inner spot, IS not
the individual, is not identical with the individual, but the
Censor is an essential and mysterious part of the scarry
and intricate system that composes Man. Furthermore,
the Censor is omniscient. He knows almost everything.
Certain phenomena, within this picture of Man, makes
everything quite uncertain. What? Well, we do not know
the exact agenda of the Censor? Who is THE MASTER
of the Censor? It most certainly is primarily not me ( in
my case ). The answer is: we do not know.
N
146
The Censor seems to have unlimited memory. Further-
more, the Censor seems to be extraordinarily bright.
Even in service with the dumbest person on earth, the
Censor has a clear head. The Censor seems to possess
almost supernatural wisdom.
We do not.
How does the Censor know that A.: We cannot stand to
remember the first day in school when we tripped on a
threshold and hit a tooth so bad that we lost the tooth.
Moreover, how does the Censor, or the Censor ́s cousin
know, that it is any method in that we always get nausea
when seeing an amissing tooth or spotting a first-grader?
Alternatively, has the censor nothing to do with nausea.
Do the Censor and those who are responsible for nausea
have responsibility for two different departments?
Before we continue, we should let ourselves remember
that the Censor is not an instance with any knowledge of
anything else than our person's history and the experi-
ences that we have made.
OR HAS HE?
Maybe he has been much more observant than I have.
When I have been busy looking only at beautiful girls,
HE might have taken time to observe all kinds of things,
like furniture, clothing, weather, manner of speech, yes,
God only knows! Maybe our Censor and we do not have
very much in common. Maybe our Censor has LEARNT
things that we have not?Maybe the Censor was the one
who picked up things from the books we read when we
just were having the trouble of figuring out what mean-
ings of the words were that we thought we
knew.....Maybe the Censor and we have not at all the
same background? Maybe he is the wise guy that we al-
ways dreamt of being? The Censor also knows what is
best for us. Of course, if he is that clever. Maybe our Cen-
sor is like Einstein?
147
BUT! And THIS is the important thing. Even if the
Censor is the most competent person in the world, he
STILL only is human. He does not have anything to do
with universal, absolute truth. This is important. Freudi-
an or other psychoanalysts claim that it is as if the mes-
sages from the dream and the Censor, which sometimes
are referred to in art and literature, these symbols, in
conjunction to events, CARRY UNIVERSAL TRUTH.
Art might rightly refer to our amnesia and point at the
truth of, but seldom the limitation of, the Censor. As
Freud put him forth, a Romanticist, who does not know a
thing about the Censor, might believe that there inside
every person is truth. The Romanticist, who is eager to
create a myth out of a person's kernel, sometimes thinks
he has the truth. Furthermore, when Schlegel wants to
create a myth based upon Man's inner kernel, it is this
dedicated inner area he is referring to. This inner kernel
might make us come to think of the Censor. Or not.
Schlegel ́s vision is, in short, built upon a vision of uni-
versal knowledge of the soul.
Now, back to the tooth and the schoolboy. We might
scrutinize how on earth the Censor can know about what
the boy can stand to remember.
The actual case with the tooth. The Tooth. The Censor
does notice from his central spot that we are hurt and
losing the tooth. The Censor knows that we are a small
child and that we are getting terrified and shameful. The
Censor concludes in a matter of seconds, that it is not the
case, that such a small boy can stand this amount of scar-
iness and shame. The Censor realizes that SOME chil-
dren, who are brave and tough, might stand it, but not
this very child, as a person.
It seems like the Censor might think that if the boy for-
gets this, he might be a better adult. But of course, the
Censor thinks, or have thought long ago, that erasing of
every unpleasantness might not be a proper thing to do.
After all, one never knows if this child NEEDS this
148
memory in the future. It is no way of knowing that. Per-
haps it would be a solution if we did it like this: we hide
the memory behind a riddle. IF the child is very eager to
know what happened on the first day in school, IF HE IS
DEAD EAGER, let him know. He must solve a puzzle,
however. Thus the Censor is letting the memory of the
tooth remain and does not erase it. Not at all. The Censor
also constructs a series of LEADS to the precarious
memory of the tooth. For the emergency rescue.
By any connection to something white, and at the same
time a little edgy, the Censor lets the individual, who now
grows up to a man, experience discontent. So the Censor
is exceptionally smart in his plan, based upon fairness,
justice, and thoughtfulness. The Censor lets the adult
experience this uneasiness, and then somebody says it is a
riddle in it. He is looking at some mountains with snow
on. Rocky mountains. What makes him so uneasy?
Suppose the adult man, who as a boy tripped and hurt
himself, now remembers and can come to grips with the
old event. Moreover, free himself from the terror and
shame? Because to realize all this by experiencing Rocky
Mountain was a good thing.
Now, let us ask the Censor what he thinks of why the
memory was kept! Well, it is not easy to say.
“I am not an innocent bystander exactly.” says the Cen-
sor, watching, ogling, looking sly... “Maybe,” continues
the Censor, ”I have not much of choice. Maybe the sys-
tem could not be arranged – for TECHNIVSAL REA-
SONS - so that some memories are set to delete. An erase
system would be tricky to construct. “Somebody proba-
bly arranged beforehand so that I, the Censor, HAD TO
exist and had to HIDE the unpleasant memories.” The
Censor remarks. “I had to be. I am, as a matter of fact, a
tragic hero.”; “Lots of intelligent people are trying to
outsmart me, all the time.”, the Censor complains. Amaz-
ingly no human being has ever asked himself ( or any
149
other person ) if possibly his Censor is lying! Neverthe-
less, maybe it would be too tricky a thought to think. We
cannot easily imagine a person who has got a Censor, that
is a liar.
tisdag 27 augusti 2024
INVITATION TILL en gård på landet. Roman.
Edward Tegelkrona får ett telefonsamtal från barndomsvännen Herbert, som äger en mindre herrgård i Halland. Det handlar om ett brev som vännen Herbert fått från USA innehållande egendomliga och oroande uppgifter. Herbert ber Edward om hjälp. Edward förstår att detta är början på ett litet äventyr, när han godtar en inbjudan till Herberts gård, Boxeby, med både nyfikenhet och hjärtlighet.
https://www.adlibris.com/se/bok/invitation-till-en-gard-pa-landet-en-roman-9789180576154
söndag 25 augusti 2024
lördag 24 augusti 2024
AUTUMN BLOOD
AUTUMN BLOOD
Chapter ONE
"What a racket!" old Edward thought after standing in the hallway and listening for several minutes. Quickly, he then took the four steps to the front door and opened it just halfway, peeking out. People with red faces were running up and down the stairs. Some wore shoes, others did not. Some of them were crying, others were screaming right out.
"What's going on?!" Edward shouted.
"Somebody has been MURDERED. It´s in the laundry room!" a barefoot girl unbeknownst to Edward hollered to him, with her chemically stiffened purple hair protruding in a little tuft towards the sky, tightly holding the sleeves of her modern dark blue duffel with both hands, whose nails had zebra patterns painted on them.
"Murdered??
Someone..."
"Yes," she said. She had stopped at his floor – third - because she had hurt a toe a little. "It's probably best if you stay inside," she said dismissively and cruelly, and Edward thought he must look ghastly, as he often thought himself nowadays when he looked at himself in the mirror, and that she also was treating him like a nobody. Perhaps that's why Edward – in a bit of anger - quickly grabbed his keys from inside the apartment and hasted out into the hallway, locked his door, and, in pushing the purple – or rather violet - girl aside, went over to knock on his neighbor Castor's door, right in the midst of the wild frenzy of mainly young people wearing peculiar designer clothes, racing up and down the stairs.
The elevator jerked violently between two floors, with a lone police officer banging on the gate and walls inside it. Castor opened his door just a crack. He looked scared. The cruel zebra girl disappeared downstairs, where another door soon slammed shut, indicating that she, after all, lived in the lower regions of the building, which had a total of seven floors and was built by functionalists in 1940.
===================================
Autumn arrives, grey and cold. It always does. The immense autumn. Time for summary, time for accountability, when many walk through the city streets in the evenings surrounded by a dark purple glow. Autumn is a wonder, but it is also a disruption in this wonder, for autumn itself is the mystery that so carelessly follows the wonderful gift of summer, and it is simultaneously on its way to something else. Therefore, while summer is a goal, autumn is a plan.
( på svenska: Höstdrama". Finns i nätbokhandeln som ebok och paperback.)
fredag 23 augusti 2024
What was unique with Kafka?
What was unique about Kafka?
Rather, the case is this: Kafka's structural, literary form is based upon a refined mega-structural narrative split. It is the split between subject-"voice" and object-"voice" on the one hand, and human conscious and uncons©ious mind, on the other. This is not easy either to describe or to understand! The uniqueness of the works of Franz Kafka and the perplexing historical accuracy of the concept of Kafkaesque are both phenomena that many readers and scholars have noticed over the years. Through the years, a fruitful explanation of the uniqueness and accuracy of these works has been missing. Scholars have ever from the 1930ies been noticing the extraordinary qualities of Kafka text. Strange - Kafkaesque - features have been attributed to the short stories and the novels of Kafka. The Kafka hero has - rightly - been seen as a mere figure, and the “dream-like” landscape universe has been seen as a characteristic, and one has frequently been looking upon these entities, together with a few stylistic features, as technical dominants in the shaping of the concept of the Kafkaesque. Genell´s Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis displays a model, together with a biographical survey and a historical perspective on possible influences, that, reversely, forms a hermeneutic, actual explanation of these features, as well as to what is denoted by the concept, from the perspective of a dynamic contextual center, explained in a model containing three levels, levels forming the discourse, typical of Kafka. This book tries to unravel the enigma of the concept by reference to the process of creation and by Kafka´s implicit use of TWO unconscious levels within the universe of his most important works. The veil of mystery may never be lifted regarding Kafka´s eerie classics of Modernity like it will never be lifted when it comes to literature as a whole. Still, it might be essential - in order not to fall into any metaphysical trap - to know about the technique behind the Kafkaesque to be able to reflect upon the Self-Consciousness of Modern Man of the 20ieth century, a century so intensely marked by a dialogue between society and the works and ideas of Sigmund Freud. Self-consciousness of Man, as it appeared with St. Augustine, the great Italian Renaissance writers, Erasmus, Shakespeare, Montaigne, the German secular Romantics, and Hegel, swiftly developed into something even much more complex with the appearance of Freud and the groundbreaking publication of his Traumdeutung in the year of 1900, and, more so, with the creation of the Kafkaesque, with the works of Kafka, around the year of 1912. The birth of the Kafkaesque can be dated to the night in the autumn of 1912 when Kafka wrote Das Urteil. The book, Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis revolves solely around this strange split of ©onsciousness and its ©onsequences. The Kafkaesque is brought about by two phenomena, and Genell is in his book discussing only the first one. 1.) A literary trick, built upon a split Unconscious ( strange as it of course may sound, and difficult -) and 2.) a unique mental sensibility. WHAT IF one had a Dream of a Dream and the two of them could communicate?? That is what happens in a Franz Kafka story! The book Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis deals with Kafka's novels and short stories from the aspect of the Kafkaesque, and it does so by looking for the means that create this effect. These means turn out to be largely technical. Thus, this book, Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis, shows how Kafka uses a narratological split, split consciousness, and SPLIT Unconscious of the hero to create the Kafkaesque by a rare trick. This new book shows how Kafka became one of the most prominent artists to create and define Modernity. Kafka took part in the thrilling creation of Self-conscience of the 20ieth century, marked by a constant dialogue with Freud and his works. Self-Conscience as Man knew it since St. Augustine, the Italian renaissance writers Erasmus, Shakespeare, and Montaigne, and later with the secular Romantics and Hegel swiftly developed within Modernism into something much more complex, primarily with the appearance of Freud's "Traumdeutung" in the year of 1900. And Kafka - rebutting Schnitzler - then set out to complete it all. The works of Kafka appeared as a reaction to 1.) Modern times, to 2.) his own personal alienation, and to 3.) Freud. Kafka's answer to Modernity – to the modern condition – was astonishingly complex, but it turned out to be very accurate and accomplished right from the beginning. When other reactions to the Modern Condition, like Hugo Ball, Appolinaire, and Dada, displayed a picture of a chaotic and rebellious attitude to reason and morals, Kafka, much like Rimbaud actually, showed a far more complex ability to make modern society's human-understandable itself, in a universal narrative. Kafka, in exploring the Unconscious, as by Freud, and in doing so using a Romantic "Ästhetik des Schwebens," is the unique discoverer of the marvels of mind, and is, in this, equal to Freud. Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis sets out to explain how the Kafkaesque itself generates - even today, 100 years after its birth - an interrogation that scrutinizes the Freudian theory and our conception of the unique human consciousness. Kafka's relation to Freud was somewhat like a son's relation to the father. Hence, Kafka did not acknowledge Freud's discoveries, methods, and notions as truths. But he saw them – ironically enough – as facts. And in a sense, they were. Freud's views were historical facts in their profound influence on the Mind and Society of the century. Kafka used Freud as part of the revealing of Modern Myth, and the myths used by Modernity. Kafka used Freud, but Kafka added on top of Freud´s model of the human psyche another split to human consciousness in his literary universe. Kafka thus did not "believe in" Freud, but he was fascinated by him. Freud suited Kafka well. Almost too well. He did not look at all to Freud to a great extent, ... did not own several books by Freud ... but he had – like many others – acquired a sort of immediate understanding of Freud's ideas through a kind of everyday osmosis. Kafka actually started as a writer of lyrical prose, short prose poems in the style of Goethe, Kleist, and Flaubert. But his dream was to write a novel, and it ought to be like the one Flaubert in his usual rage once claimed he wanted to write: a lovely book about nothing at all. So it happened that Kafka - not at all being highly intellectual or an eloquent philosopher - developed a technique for writing novels where he was extending a sole situation into a perfectly static ( i.e., nothingy ) drama displaying a struggle between conscious and unconscious. It also seems as he tried to develop the style of Tieck and the Romantics. Using his extraordinary ( perhaps autistic ) sensibility, Kafka's technique miraculously was born on one evening in 1912, writing the short story "The Verdict." The following day, he even asked his fiancée Felice for its meaning. Later, in 1912 with the writing of "The Metamorphosis" and, in 1913, the unfinished "The Trial," his technique of displaying the Kafkaesque was already full-fledged. Here he – almost FORCE by his own personal and social catastrophe - introduced a pseudo plot in a kind of pseudo novel displaying a story of a split, a struggle of a conscious instance of a person, shown as a hero-figure battling this person's OWN Unconscious. As it turned out, this battle caused a second unconscious part to appear in the universe of this fiction. ( Examples can be found in Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis .) It seems that the hero-figure, devoid of his Unconscious, HAD TO develop such an unconscious to be able to handle his surrounding world, which was his original Unconscious. Here we thus are having a triadic structure and a strange meeting of two unconscious instances. This fictional condition primarily results in a double exposure of the unconscious and a strange transcendence of the Ego, which cannot easily be reflected upon since it has no equivalent in reality. This is NOT EASY TO UNDERSTAND!
As a result of this Kafka-technique, which probably was unconscious (!) to Kafka himself, we are also – apart from the nausea of double Unconscious, a kind of self-consciousness of the Unconscious - experiencing a very intense poetry, depicting utter loneliness in a framework of a sad pseudo-protest, parallel to Weber´s, against the superpower of civil organization and law in general, as well as a hymn of the melancholy beauty of existence the like of which nobody else in the 20ieth Century has created: The concept of "Kafkaesque" has been created upon the experience of the works of Kafka by the Collective Mind, and in some yet not quite analyzed way, it also has extended our mode of perception. The concept of the Kafkaesque, and the Kafkaesque itself, AS IRONY, is vital for both the being and the understanding of our culture and being! The questions regarding this concept, raised in Kafka - a Freudo-Structuralist Analysis questions somewhat elusive, are mainly two: [ 1. ]: what IS the kafkaesque? (…that is caused by this split ) And [ 2. ]: how did Kafka DO to create this, the" Kafkaesque"? These questions are highly original and deal with ideological, cultural, and psychological matters and tacit knowledge, and complicated issues concerning the ontology of fiction. Perhaps the concept of "Kafka" is an ongoing question in Modernity itself that will prevail?....
Kaj Bernh. Genell 2023.
Copyright Kaj Bernh. Genell 2023.
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