Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 5

Franz Kafka - Author - Biography.

com

7/26/15, 9:50 AM

Franz Kafka Biography


Synopsis
Born on July 3, 1883, in Prague, capital of what is now the Czech Republic, writer Franz Kafka grew
up in a middle-class Jewish family. After studying law at the University of Prague, he worked in
insurance and wrote in the evenings. In 1923, he moved to Berlin to focus on writing, but died of
tuberculosis shortly after. His friend Max Brod published most of his work posthumously, such as
Amerika and The Castle.

Early Years
Writer Franz Kafka was the son of a well-to-do Jewish family who was born on July 3, 1883, in
Prague, the capital of Bohemia, a kingdom that was a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Tragedy shaped the Kafka home. Franz's two younger brothers, Georg and Heinrich, died in infancy
by the time Kafka was 6, leaving the boy the only son in a family that included three daughters.
Kafka had a difficult relationship with both of his parents. His mother, Julie, was a devoted
homemaker who lacked the intellectual depth to understand her son's dreams to become a writer.
Kafka's father, Hermann, had a forceful personality that often overwhelmed the Kafka home. He
was a success in business, making his living retailing men's and women's clothes.
Kafka's father had a profound impact on both Kafka's life and writing. He was a tyrant of sorts, with
a wicked temper and little appreciation for his son's creative side. Much of Kafka's personal
struggles, in romance and other relationships, came, he believed, in part from his complicated
relationship with his father. In his literature, Kafka's characters were often coming up against an
overbearing power of some kind, one that could easily break the will of men and destroy their sense
of self-worth.
Kafka seems to have derived much of his value directly from to his family, in particular his father.
For much of his adult life, he lived within close proximity to his parents.

Education
German was his first language. In fact, despite his Czech background and Jewish roots, Kafka's
http://www.biography.com/people/franz-kafka-9359401#legacy

Page 1 of 5

Franz Kafka - Author - Biography.com

7/26/15, 9:50 AM

identity favored German culture.


Kafka was a smart child who did well in school even at the Altstdter Staatsgymnasium, an exacting
high school for the academic elite. Still, even while Kafka earned the respect of his teachers, he
chafed under their control and the school's control of his life.
After high school Kafka enrolled at the Charles Ferdinand University of Prague, where intended to
study chemistry but after just two weeks switched to law. The change pleased his father, and also
gave Kafka the time to take classes in art and literature.
In 1906 Kafka completed his law degree and embarked on a year of unpaid work as a law clerk.

Work Life
After completing his apprenticeship, Kafka found work with an Italian insurance agency in late
1907. It was a terrible fit from the start, with Kafka forced to work a tiring schedule that left little
time for his writing.
He lasted at the agency a little less than a year. After turning in his resignation he quickly found a
new job with the Workers' Accident Insurance Institute for the Kingdom of Bohemia.
As much as any work could, the job and his employers suited Kafka, who worked hard and became
his boss's right-hand man. Kafka remained with the company until 1917, when a bout with
tuberculosis forced him to take a sick leave and to eventually retire in 1922.

Love and Health


At work Kafka was a popular employee, easy to socialize with and seen as somebody with a good
sense of humor. But his personal life still raged with complications. His inhibitions and insecurities
plagued his relationships. Twice he was engaged to marry his girlfriend, Felice Bauer, before the
two finally went their separate ways in 1917.
Later, Kafka later fell in love with Dora Dymant (Diamant), who shared his Jewish roots and a
preference for socialism. Amidst Kafka's increasingly dire health, the two fell in love and lived
together in Berlin. Their relationship largely centered on Kafka's illnesses. For many years, even
before he contracted tuberculosis, Kafka had not been well. Constantly strained and stressed, he

http://www.biography.com/people/franz-kafka-9359401#legacy

Page 2 of 5

Franz Kafka - Author - Biography.com

7/26/15, 9:50 AM

suffered from migraines, boils, depression, anxiety and insomnia.


Kafka and Dora eventually returned to Prague. In an attempt to overcome his tuberculosis, Kafka
traveled to Vienna for treatment at a sanatorium. He died in Kierling, Austria, on June 3, 1924. He
was buried beside his parents in Prague's New Jewish Cemetery in Olsanske.

Body of Work
While Kafka strove to earn a living, he also poured himself into his writing work. An old friend
named Max Brod would prove crucial in supporting Kafka's literary work both during his life and
long after it.
Kafka's celebrity as a writer only came after his death. During his lifetime, he published just a sliver
of his overall work.
His most popular and best-selling short story, "The Metamorphosis," was completed in 1912 and
published in 1915. The story was written from Kafka's third-floor room, which offered a direct view
of the Vltava River and its toll bridge.
"I would stand at the window for long periods," he wrote in his diary in 1912, "and was frequently
tempted to amaze the toll collector on the bridge below by my plunge."
Kafka followed up "The Metamorphosis" with Mediation, a collection of short stories, in 1913, and
then "Before the Law," a short story, a year later.
Even with his worsening health, Kafka continued to write. In 1916 he completed "The Judgment,"
which spoke directly about the relationship he shared with his father. Later works included "In the
Penal Colony" and "A Country Doctor," both finished in 1919.
In 1924, an ill but still working Kafka finished A Hunger Artist, which features four stories that
demonstrate the concise and lucid style that marked his writing at the end of his life.
But Kafka, still living with the demons that plagued with him self-doubt, was reluctant to unleash
his work on the world. He requested that Brod, who doubled as his literary executor, destroy any
unpublished manuscripts.
Fortunately, Brod did not adhere to his friend's wishes and in 1925 published The Trial, a dark,
http://www.biography.com/people/franz-kafka-9359401#legacy

Page 3 of 5

Franz Kafka - Author - Biography.com

7/26/15, 9:50 AM

paranoid tale that proved to be the author's most successful novel. The story centers on the life of
Joseph K., who is forced to defend himself in a hopeless court system against a crime that is never
revealed to him or to the reader.
The following year, Brod released The Castle, which again railed against a faceless and
dominating bureaucracy. In the novel, the protagonist, whom the reader knows only as K., tries to
meet with the mysterious authorities who rule his village.
In 1927, the novel Amerika was published. The story hinges on a boy, Karl Rossmann, who is sent
by his family to America, where his innocence and simplicity are exploited everywhere he travels.
Amerika struck at the same father issues that were prevalent in so much of Kafka's other work. But
the story also spoke to Kafka's love of travel books and memoirs (he adored The Autobiography of
Benjamin Franklin) and his longing to see the world.
In 1931, Brod published the short story "The Great Wall of China," which Kafka had originally
crafted 14 years before.

Legacy
Incredibly, at the time of his death Kafka's name was known only to small group of readers. It was
only after he died and Max Brod went against the demands of his friend that Kafka and his work
gained fame. His books garnered favor during World War II, especially, and greatly influenced
German literature.
As the 1960s took shape and Eastern Europe was under the fist of bureaucratic Communist
governments, Kafka's writing resonated particularly strongly with readers. So alive and vibrant
were the tales that Kafka spun about man and faceless organizations that a new term was
introduced into the English lexicon: "Kafkaesque."
The measure of Kafka's appeal and value as a writer was quantified in 1988, when his handwritten
manuscript of The Trial was sold at auction for $1.98 million, at that point the highest price ever
paid for a modern manuscript.
The buyer, a West German book dealer, gushed after his purchase was finalized. "This is perhaps
the most important work in 20th-century German literature," he said, "and Germany had to have
it."
http://www.biography.com/people/franz-kafka-9359401#legacy

Page 4 of 5

Franz Kafka - Author - Biography.com

http://www.biography.com/people/franz-kafka-9359401#legacy

7/26/15, 9:50 AM

Page 5 of 5

Вам также может понравиться