Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • "Someone must have been telling lies about Josef K.

  • He knew he had done nothing wrong, but one morning, he was arrested."

  • Thus begins "The Trial,"

  • one of author Franz Kafka's most well-known novels.

  • K, the protagonist, is arrested out of nowhere

  • and made to go through a bewildering process

  • where neither the cause of his arrest,

  • nor the nature of the judicial proceedings

  • are made clear to him.

  • This sort of scenario is considered so characteristic of Kafka's work

  • that scholars came up with a new word for it.

  • Kafkaesque has entered the vernacular to describe unnecessarily complicated

  • and frustrating experiences,

  • like being forced to navigate labyrinths of bureaucracy.

  • But does standing in a long line to fill out confusing paperwork

  • really capture the richness of Kafka's vision?

  • Beyond the word's casual use, what makes something Kafkaesque?

  • Franz Kafka's stories do indeed deal with many mundane and absurd aspects

  • of modern bureaucracy,

  • drawn in part from his experience of working as an insurance clerk

  • in early 20th century Prague.

  • Many of his protagonists are office workers

  • compelled to struggle through a web of obstacles

  • in order to achieve their goals,

  • and often the whole ordeal turns out to be so disorienting and illogical

  • that success becomes pointless in the first place.

  • For example, in the short story, "Poseidon,"

  • the Ancient Greek god is an executive so swamped with paperwork

  • that he's never had time to explore his underwater domain.

  • The joke here is that not even a god can handle the amount of paperwork

  • demanded by the modern workplace.

  • But the reason why is telling.

  • He's unwilling to delegate any of the work

  • because he deems everyone else unworthy of the task.

  • Kafka's Poseidon is a prisoner of his own ego.

  • This simple story contains all of the elements

  • that make for a truly Kafkaesque scenario.

  • It's not the absurdity of bureaucracy alone,

  • but the irony of the character's circular reasoning in reaction to it

  • that is emblematic of Kafka's writing.

  • His tragicomic stories act as a form of mythology for the modern industrial age,

  • employing dream logic to explore the relationships

  • between systems of arbitrary power and the individuals caught up in them.

  • Take, for example, Kafka's most famous story, "Metamorphosis."

  • When Gregor Samsa awaken's one morning to find himself transformed

  • into a giant insect,

  • his greatest worry is that he gets to work on time.

  • Of course, this proves impossible.

  • It was not only the authoritarian realm of the workplace that inspired Kafka.

  • Some of his protagonists' struggles come from within.

  • The short story, "A Hunger Artist,"

  • describes a circus performer whose act consists of extended fasts.

  • He's upset that the circus master limits these to 40 days,

  • believing this prevents him from achieving greatness in his art.

  • But when his act loses popularity,

  • he is left free to starve himself to death.

  • The twist comes when he lays dying in anonymity,

  • regretfully admitting that his art has always been a fraud.

  • He fasted not through strength of will,

  • but simply because he never found a food he liked.

  • Even in "The Trial,"

  • which seems to focus directly on bureaucracy,

  • the vague laws and bewildering procedures point to something far more sinister:

  • the terrible momentum of the legal system proves unstoppable,

  • even by supposedly powerful officials.

  • This is a system that doesn't serve justice,

  • but whose sole function is to perpetuate itself.

  • What political theorist Hannah Arendt,

  • writing years after Kafka's death,

  • would call "tyranny without a tyrant."

  • Yet accompanying the bleakness of Kafka's stories,

  • there's a great deal of humor

  • rooted in the nonsensical logic of the situations described.

  • So on the one hand, it's easy to recognize the Kafkaesque in today's world.

  • We rely on increasingly convoluted systems of administration

  • that have real consequences on every aspect of our lives.

  • And we find our every word judged by people we can't see

  • according to rules we don't know.

  • On the other hand, by fine-tuning our attention to the absurd,

  • Kafka also reflects our shortcomings back at ourselves.

  • In doing so, he reminds us that the world we live in is one we create,

  • and have the power to change for the better.

"Someone must have been telling lies about Josef K.

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B2 中高級

【TED-Ed】什麼東西才是 "卡夫卡式 "的?- 諾亞-塔夫林 (【TED-Ed】What makes something "Kafkaesque"? - Noah Tavlin)

  • 359 54
    VoiceTube 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字