Franz Kafka

Kafka in 1923 Franz Kafka, ; ; ; in Czech, he was sometimes called František Kafka.}} (3 July 1883 – 3 June 1924) was a German language Jewish Czech writer and novelist born in Prague, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Widely regarded as a major figure of 20th-century literature, his work fuses elements of realism and the fantastique, and typically features isolated protagonists facing bizarre or surreal predicaments and incomprehensible socio-bureaucratic powers. The term ''Kafkaesque'' has entered the lexicon to describe situations like those depicted in his writings. His best-known works include the novella ''The Metamorphosis'' (1915) and the novels ''The Trial'' (1924) and ''The Castle'' (1926).

Kafka was born into a middle-class German- and Yiddish-speaking Czech Jewish family in Prague, the capital of the Kingdom of Bohemia, which belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire (later the capital of Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic). He trained as a lawyer, and after completing his legal education was employed full-time in various legal and insurance jobs. His professional obligations led to internal conflict as he felt that his true vocation was writing. Only a minority of his works were published during his life; the story-collections ''Contemplation'' (1912) and ''A Country Doctor'' (1919), and individual stories, such as his novella ''The Metamorphosis'', were published in literary magazines, but they received little attention. He wrote hundreds of letters to family and close friends, including his father, with whom he had a strained and formal relationship. He became engaged to several women but never married. He died relatively unknown in 1924 of tuberculosis, aged 40.

Though Kafka is most famous for his novels and short stories, he is also celebrated for his brief fables and aphorisms. Like his longer fiction, these sketches may be brutal in some aspects, but their dreadfulness is frequently funny. A close acquaintance of Kafka's remarked that both his audience and the author himself sometimes laughed so much during readings that Kafka could not continue in his delivery, finding it necessary to collect himself before completing his recitation of the work.

Kafka's writings are sometimes seen as prophetic or premonitory of a totalitarian future. These perceptions derive from the nightmarish world he created and from his commentaries in his diaries, letters, and aphorisms.

Kafka's work has influenced numerous artists, composers, filmmakers, literary historians, religious scholars, cultural theorists, and philosophers. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Kafka, Franz.
Published 1999
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2
by Kafka, Franz.
Published 1994
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by Kafka, Franz.
Published 1979
Book
4
by Kafka, Franz.
Published 1997
Book
5
by Kafka, Franz.
Published 1978
Book
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by Kafka, Franz 1883-1924
Published 1963
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7
by Kafka, Franz 1883-1924
Published 1978
Book
8
by Kafka, Franz 1883-1924
Published 2003
Book
9
by Kafka, Franz 1883-1924
Published 2000
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10
by Kafka, Franz., 1883-1924.
Published 1979
Book
11
by Kafka, Franz., 1883-1924.
Published 2006
Book
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