Kafka's Jewish Languages 2016/e


The Hidden Openness of Tradition

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By David Suchoff
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
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Pages:
277

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Description

David Suchoff is Professor of English at Colby College.

Introduction: Kafka's Jewish Voice Chapter 1. Cold War Kafka and Beyond: The Return of Jewish Languages Chapter 2. The Breakthrough to Jewish Languages: "The Judgment" Chapter 3. Hebrews in New York: Amerika, or The Man Who Disappeared Chapter 4. Kabbalah and Comedy: The Trial and the Heretic Tradition Chapter 5. Open Boundaries: The Castle and the Origins of Modern Hebrew Afterword: The Puzzle of National Traditions, or the Art of Nut-Cracking Notes Index Acknowledgments

"A tightly knit exposition of previous research and a presentation of the author's own close literary analysis. . . . The conclusion is clear: Kafka wrote in German and lived in Czech Prague but was never far removed from his Jewishness. This challenging study convincingly amplifies the linguistic origins of Kafka's genius. Highly Recommended." (Choice) "In Kafka's Jewish Languages David Suchoff quite persuasively argues that the Germanic interplay between high and low (Yiddish) languages and the rise of modern Hebrew account for far more of the plays and innovations of Kafka's writing than has previously been acknowledged. Suchoff's diligent, innovative, and supremely intelligent work adds significantly to Kafka scholarship and Judaic studies." (Henry Sussman, Yale University)

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