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Lost in America

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“The story that I’m writing, which, I must say, is laid out into the endless … is called Der Verschollene [The Missing One] and takes place exclusively in the United States of North America,” Franz Kafka wrote to his beloved, Felice Bauer. The story of the young Karl Rossmann, a sixteen-year-old, whom his parents send to the New World from his Bohemian homeland, was indeed laid out without end. Of his three novels, this was the one on which the author spent the most time over the longest period of time, but like The Trial and The Castle it remained an unfinished torso. The Prague jurist and insurance official Franz Kafka only knew about America from flickering silent movies, from travelogues, and from the tales of a number of relatives from his widely branched out family. The story of the lost Karl Rossmann is a different kind of immigration story, one of an innocent plunged suddenly into the world of deceitful adults. But like the Dickens-novel the author realized he was writing, was the story supposed to end happily in an Oklahoma of wonders?

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Lost in America, Franz Kafka

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2010
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Die Welt wird immer kafkaesker. Gut, das Original zu kennen.

Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
Franz Kafka
Verlag
Vitalis
Erscheinungsdatum
2010
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
312
ISBN10
8072533169
ISBN13
9788072533169
Reihe
Erstveröffentlichung
1927
Originaltitel
Amerika
Bewertung
3,75 von 5 Sternen
Beschreibung
“The story that I’m writing, which, I must say, is laid out into the endless … is called Der Verschollene [The Missing One] and takes place exclusively in the United States of North America,” Franz Kafka wrote to his beloved, Felice Bauer. The story of the young Karl Rossmann, a sixteen-year-old, whom his parents send to the New World from his Bohemian homeland, was indeed laid out without end. Of his three novels, this was the one on which the author spent the most time over the longest period of time, but like The Trial and The Castle it remained an unfinished torso. The Prague jurist and insurance official Franz Kafka only knew about America from flickering silent movies, from travelogues, and from the tales of a number of relatives from his widely branched out family. The story of the lost Karl Rossmann is a different kind of immigration story, one of an innocent plunged suddenly into the world of deceitful adults. But like the Dickens-novel the author realized he was writing, was the story supposed to end happily in an Oklahoma of wonders?