The Penal Colony: Stories and Short Pieces

Front Cover
Schocken Books, 1948 - Czech fiction - 320 pages
"This volume brings together everything that Franz Kafka himself published during his lifetime, all those works, that is, which he thought finished enough to permit of their being published. We know that Kafka possessed a fanatical artistic scrupulosity, one that rivaled Flaubert's in its rigor, and so it comes as no surprise that this collection should also be the most powerful Kafka volume ever published"--

From inside the book

Contents

Conversation with the Supplicant
9
Unmasking a Confidence Trickster
25
The Street Window
39
Copyright

7 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1948)

Franz Kafka was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, of middle-class Jewish parents. He apparently suffered a great deal of psychological pain at a young age at the hands of his domineering father. He took a law degree at the German University of Prague, then obtained a position in the workman's compensation division of the Austrian government. Always neurotic, insecure, and filled with a sense of inadequacy, Kafka's writing is a search for personal fulfillment and understanding. He wrote very slowly and deliberately, publishing very little in his lifetime. At his death he asked a close friend to burn his remaining manuscripts, but the friend refused the request. Instead the friend arranged for publication Kafka's longer stories, which have since brought him worldwide fame and have influenced many contemporary writers. Kafka's stories are nightmarish tales in which a helpless central character's every move is controlled by heartless, impersonal forces. An example is his 1938 psychological thriller, "The Metamorphosis." The story centers around a salesman named Gregor, who wakes up one morning and finds he is no longer a man but a giant insect. In today's increasingly complex, technological, and bureaucratic societies, Kafka has found a growing audience of sympathetic readers who understand the feeling of powerlessness Kafka's heroes experienced.

Bibliographic information