"You know how I hate letters. All the misfortune of my life - and I don't mean to complain, rather to make a general didactic observation - comes, if you will, from letters, or from the possibility of writing letters. It is, after all, a communication with ghosts, and one not even limited to the ghost of the adressee, but also with one's own ghost, which develops in one on the quiet in the letter one writes." - Franz Kafka to Milena Jesenská, March 1922. - Franz Kafka wrote this letter to his father, Hermann Kafka, in November 1919. Max Brod, Kafka’s literary executor, relates that Kafka actually gave the letter to his mother to hand to his father, hoping it might renew a relationship that had lost itself in tension and frustration on both sides. But Kafka’s probing of the deep flaw in their relationship spared neither his father nor himself. He could not help seeing the failure of communication between father and son as another moment in the larger existential predicament depicted in so much of his work. Probably realizing the futility of her son’s gesture, Julie Kafka did not deliver the letter but instead returned it to its author.
Letter to Father -
Franz Kafka
Vitalis
2011
86 páginas
2h 52m
ISBN-13: 9788072531813
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