Description

Book Synopsis
Franz Kafka, the Jewish writer from Prague, who wrote in German, grew up after the Emancipation at a time when most Jews in Central and Western Europe suffered from an identity crisis. The most prominent characteristic of the experience of this generation of young people was hybridism, a kind of partial assimilation that brought them to a dead-end. In Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity, Sara Loeb examines this complex dialectic, focusing on the question of if, how, and to what extent Kafka''s works reflect the identity crisis he suffered. She offers a new perspective of his life through an encounter between the points of view of two well-known critics: Max Brod, Kafka''s close friend, and Marthe Rober, a literary critic who translated Kafka''s works into French. Each seeks to examine, in a different way, the source of Kafka''s link to his Jewishness. Loeb opens a window to Kafka''s inner world, and examines the man and his work from a new perspective.

Trade Review
'Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity'. . . is a meticulously presented, in-depth focus on life, philosophy, and Jewish identity of the renowned author Franz Kafka. . . highly recommended for students of Kafka's writings as an unusually thoughtful, albeit sometimes technical account of the man, his life, thought, and work. * The Bookwatch *
Loeb's attempt to find middle ground between two competing perspectives (Max Brod's overly optimistic theological appraisal of Kafka's aesthetic achievement and Marthe Robert's 'psychoanalytic-structural' approach) yields some provocative insights intothe triangulating effects of Kafka's multiple alienation as an assimilated Jew writing in German in the Czech city of Prague. * CHOICE *
Loeb's attempt to find middle ground between two competing perspectives (Max Brod's overly optimistic theological appraisal of Kafka's aesthetic achievement and Marthe Robert's 'psychoanalytic-structural' approach) yields some provocative insights into the triangulating effects of Kafka's multiple alienation as an assimilated Jew writing in German in the Czech city of Prague. * CHOICE *
'Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity'. . . is a meticulously presented, in-depth focus on life, philosophy, and Jewish identity of the renowned author Franz Kafka. . . highly recommended for students of Kafka's writings as an unusually thoughtful, albeit sometimes technical account of the man, his life, thought, and work. * The Bookwatch *

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Franz Kafka- The Jewish Element in His Life Chapter 3 Max Brod and Marthe Robert- The Background of Their Philosophical Approaches Chapter 4 Modes of Criticism Chapter 5 Max Brod and the Religious Moment (A Metaphysical View) Chapter 6 Marthe Robert and the Duality of Identity (Psychoanalytical-Structural Approach) Chapter 7 Summary Chapter 8 Endnotes Chapter 9 Bibliography Chapter 10 Index

Franz Kafka

    Product form

    £63.90

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £71.00 – you save £7.10 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Sara Loeb

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Franz Kafka by Sara Loeb

      Publisher: University Press of America
      Publication Date: 12/26/2001 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780761821410, 978-0761821410
      ISBN10: 0761821414

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Franz Kafka, the Jewish writer from Prague, who wrote in German, grew up after the Emancipation at a time when most Jews in Central and Western Europe suffered from an identity crisis. The most prominent characteristic of the experience of this generation of young people was hybridism, a kind of partial assimilation that brought them to a dead-end. In Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity, Sara Loeb examines this complex dialectic, focusing on the question of if, how, and to what extent Kafka''s works reflect the identity crisis he suffered. She offers a new perspective of his life through an encounter between the points of view of two well-known critics: Max Brod, Kafka''s close friend, and Marthe Rober, a literary critic who translated Kafka''s works into French. Each seeks to examine, in a different way, the source of Kafka''s link to his Jewishness. Loeb opens a window to Kafka''s inner world, and examines the man and his work from a new perspective.

      Trade Review
      'Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity'. . . is a meticulously presented, in-depth focus on life, philosophy, and Jewish identity of the renowned author Franz Kafka. . . highly recommended for students of Kafka's writings as an unusually thoughtful, albeit sometimes technical account of the man, his life, thought, and work. * The Bookwatch *
      Loeb's attempt to find middle ground between two competing perspectives (Max Brod's overly optimistic theological appraisal of Kafka's aesthetic achievement and Marthe Robert's 'psychoanalytic-structural' approach) yields some provocative insights intothe triangulating effects of Kafka's multiple alienation as an assimilated Jew writing in German in the Czech city of Prague. * CHOICE *
      Loeb's attempt to find middle ground between two competing perspectives (Max Brod's overly optimistic theological appraisal of Kafka's aesthetic achievement and Marthe Robert's 'psychoanalytic-structural' approach) yields some provocative insights into the triangulating effects of Kafka's multiple alienation as an assimilated Jew writing in German in the Czech city of Prague. * CHOICE *
      'Franz Kafka: A Question of Jewish Identity'. . . is a meticulously presented, in-depth focus on life, philosophy, and Jewish identity of the renowned author Franz Kafka. . . highly recommended for students of Kafka's writings as an unusually thoughtful, albeit sometimes technical account of the man, his life, thought, and work. * The Bookwatch *

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Franz Kafka- The Jewish Element in His Life Chapter 3 Max Brod and Marthe Robert- The Background of Their Philosophical Approaches Chapter 4 Modes of Criticism Chapter 5 Max Brod and the Religious Moment (A Metaphysical View) Chapter 6 Marthe Robert and the Duality of Identity (Psychoanalytical-Structural Approach) Chapter 7 Summary Chapter 8 Endnotes Chapter 9 Bibliography Chapter 10 Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account