The Castle (novel)
First edition (1926) | |
Author | Franz Kafka |
---|---|
Original title | Das Schloss |
Translator | see individual articles |
Country | Czechoslovakia |
Language | German |
Genre | Philosophical fiction, dystopian novel, political fiction, comedy |
Publisher | Munich |
Publication date | 1926 |
ISBN | 978-3-596-12444-2 |
The Castle (German: Das Schloss German pronunciation: [das ʃlɔs]; also spelled Das Schloß) is a 1926 novel by Franz Kafka. In it a protagonist known only as K. arrives in a village and struggles to gain access to the mysterious authorities who govern it from a castle. Kafka died before finishing the work, but suggested it would end with K. dying in the village, the castle notifying him on his death bed that his "legal claim to live in the village was not valid, yet, taking certain auxiliary circumstances into account, he was permitted to live and work there". Dark and at times surreal, The Castle is often understood to be about alienation, unresponsive bureaucracy, the frustration of trying to conduct business with non-transparent, seemingly arbitrary controlling systems, and the futile pursuit of an unobtainable goal.
History of the novel
Kafka began writing the novel on the evening of 27 January 1922, the day he arrived at the mountain resort of Spindlermühle (now in the Czech Republic). A picture taken of him upon his arrival shows him by a horse-drawn sleigh in the snow in a setting reminiscent of The Castle.[1] Hence, the significance that the first few chapters of the handwritten manuscript were written in first person and at some point later changed by Kafka to a third person narrator, 'K.'[2]
Max Brod
Kafka died before finishing the novel, and it is questionable whether he intended to finish it if he had survived his tuberculosis. On separate occasions he told his friend Max Brod of two different conditions: K., the book's protagonist, would continue to reside and die in the village; the castle notifying him on his death bed that his "legal claim to live in the village was not valid, yet, taking certain auxiliary circumstances into account, he was permitted to live and work there",[2] but then on 11 September 1922 in a letter to Max Brod, he said he was giving up on the book and would never return to it.[3] As it is, the book ends mid-sentence.
Although Brod was instructed by Kafka to destroy all his works on his death, he did not and set about publishing Kafka's writings. Das Schloss was originally published in German in 1926 by the publisher Joella Goodman of Munich. This edition sold far less than the 1500 copies that were printed.[4] It was republished in 1935 by Schocken Verlag in Berlin, and in 1946 by Schocken Books of New York.[5]
Brod had to heavily edit the work to ready it for publication. His goal was to gain acceptance of the work and the author, not to maintain the structure of Kafka's writing. This would play heavily in the future of the translations and continues to be the center of discussion on the text.[6] Brod donated the manuscript to Oxford University.[7]
Brod placed a strong religious significance to the symbolism of the castle.[1][8] This is one possible interpretation of the work based on numerous Judeo-Christian references as noted by many including Arnold Heidsieck.[9]
Malcolm Pasley
Author | Franz Kafka, Malcolm Pasley |
---|---|
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Genre | Philosophical novel, Dystopian |
Publisher | Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag |
Publication date | 1982 |
Media type | Print (paperback) |
Pages | 416 |
ISBN | 978-3-596-12444-2 |
The publisher soon realized the translations were "bad" and in 1940 desired a "completely different approach".[6] In 1961 Malcolm Pasley got access to all of Kafka's works except The Trial, and deposited them in Oxford's Bodleian library. Pasley and a team of scholars (Gerhard Neumann, Jost Schillemeit, and Jürgen Born) started publishing the works in 1982 through S. Fischer Verlag. Das Schloß was published that year as a two-volume set — the novel in the first volume, and the fragments, deletions and editor's notes in a second volume. This team restored the original German text to its full and incomplete state, including Kafka's unique punctuation, considered critical to the style.[10]
Stroemfeld/Roter Stern
Interpretations of Kafka's intent for the manuscript are ongoing. Stroemfeld/Roter Stern Verlag is working for the rights to publish another critical edition with manuscript and transcription side-by-side. But they have met with resistance from the Kafka heirs and Pasley.[11]
Major editions
- 1930 Translators: Willa and Edwin Muir. Based on the First German edition, by Max Brod. Published By Secker & Warburg in England and Alfred A. Knopf in the United States.
- 1941 Translators: Willa and Edwin Muir. Edition includes an Homage by Thomas Mann.
- 1954 Translators: Willa and Edwin Muir additional sections translated by Eithne Wilkins and Ernst Kaiser. "Definitive edition". Based on the Schocken 1951 Definitive edition.[12]
- 1994 Translators: Muir, et al. Preface by Irving Howe.
- 1997 Translator: J. A. Underwood, introduction: Idris Parry. Based on Pasley Critical German Text (1982, revised 1990).
- 1998 Translator: Mark Harman who also writes a preface. Based on Pasley Critical German Text (1982, revised 1990).
- 2009 Translator: Anthea Bell, introduction: Ritchie Robertson. Based on Pasley Critical German Text (1982, revised 1990).
The title
The title Das Schloss may be translated as "the castle" or "the palace", but the German word is a homonym that can also refer to a lock. It is also phonetically close to der Schluss (conclusion or end).[1] The castle is locked and closed to K and the townspeople; neither can gain access. The name of the character Klamm is similar to "Klammer" in German, which means "clip, brace, peg, fastener" and may hold a double meaning; for Klamm is essentially the lock that locks away the secrets of the Castle and the salvation of K. In ordinary usage, "klamm" is an adjective that denotes a combination of dampness and chill and can be used in reference both to weather and clothing, which inscribes a sense of unease into the main character's name.
Plot
The protagonist, K., arrives in a village governed by a mysterious bureaucracy operating in a nearby castle. When seeking shelter at the town inn, he claims to be a land surveyor summoned by the castle authorities. He is quickly notified that his castle contact is an official named Klamm, who, in an introductory note, informs K. he will report to the Council Chairman.
The Council Chairman informs K. that through a mix-up in communication between the castle and the village he was erroneously requested. But the Council Chairman offers him a position as a caretaker in service of the school teacher. Meanwhile, K., unfamiliar with the customs, bureaucracy and processes of the village, continues to attempt to reach Klamm, which is considered a strong taboo to the villagers.
The villagers hold the officials and the castle in the high regard, even though they do not appear to know what the officials do. The actions of the officials are never explained. The villagers provide assumptions and justification for the officials' actions through lengthy monologues. Everyone appears to have an explanation for the officials' actions, but they often contradict themselves and there is no attempt to hide the ambiguity. Instead, villagers praise it as another action or feature of an official.
One of the more obvious contradictions between the "official word" and the village conception is the dissertation by the secretary Erlanger on Frieda's required return to service as a barmaid. K. is the only villager that knows that the request is being forced by the castle (even though Frieda may be the genesis),[13][14] with no consideration of the inhabitants of the village.
The castle is the ultimate bureaucracy with copious paperwork that the bureaucracy maintains is "flawless". But the flawlessness is a lie; it is a flaw in the paperwork that has brought K. to the village. There are other failures of the system: K. witnesses a servant destroying paperwork when he cannot determine who the recipient should be.
The castle's occupants appear to be all adult men and there is little reference to the castle other than to its bureaucratic functions. The two notable exceptions are a fire brigade and that Otto Brunswick's wife declares herself to be from the castle. The latter declaration builds the importance of Hans, Otto's son, in K.'s eyes as a way to gain access to the castle officials.
The officials have one or more secretaries that do their work in their village. Although they sometimes come to the village, they do not interact with the villagers unless they need female companionship, implied to be sexual in nature.
Characters
Note: The Muir translations refer to the Herrenhof Inn where the Harman translations translate this to the Gentleman's Inn (while the Bell translation calls it the Castle Inn). Below, all references to the inn where the officials stay in the village is the Herrenhof Inn since this was the first, and potentially more widely read, translation.
Character | Description |
---|---|
K., the Land-Surveyor | The protagonist of the story, recognized as a land surveyor, employed as the school janitor, and a stranger to the townspeople. He spends most of the novel doggedly trying to overcome the bureaucracy of the village and to contact the castle official Klamm, however he is continually thwarted and frustrated. K. forms a sexual relationship with Frieda, the barmaid, however, Frieda eventually abandons K. for one of his assistants, Jeremiah. |
Frieda | A former barmaid at the Herrenhof, who is K.'s fiancée for most of the novel. She often finds herself torn between her duty to K. and her fears regarding his over-zealousness. She eventually abandons K. and ends up in the arms of his former assistant, Jeremiah (who has since become a waiter at the Herrenhof). |
Hans, landlord (Bridge Inn) |
Nephew of the original owner of the inn; according to his wife, Gardena, he is lazy and overly nice to K. According to K. if Hans had another wife whose first love he would have been then he would have been more independent, diligent and manly. |
Gardena, landlady (Bridge Inn) |
The prime mover of the Bridge Inn which she has been running singlehandedly for years, the work however has taken its toll on her health. She is a former short-term mistress to Klamm and very distrustful of K.'s motives who she evicts because of K's insistence on meeting Klamm; she remains infatuated with Klamm. |
Barnabas, a messenger | A messenger of the castle assigned to K. He is new to the service; K. is instructed to use him to communicate with the official Klamm. He is slender and agile though very immature and sensitive. |
Arthur and Jeremiah, K.'s assistants (Artur and Jeremias in Harman edition) |
Shortly after his arrival in the village, K. is assigned two assistants to help him with his various needs. They are a continual source of frustration and annoyance for him, however, he eventually drives them from his service through his brutal treatment. They have been assigned to K., to make him happy, by the official Galater who was deputizing for Klamm at the time. |
Mayor/Superintendent (Village Council Chairman in Harman edition; German: Dorfvorsteher) |
A friendly, fat, clean-shaven man assigned by Klamm to give K. his assignment and hence is his superior; however according to Gardena he is utterly insignificant and wouldn't last a day in his position if not for his wife Mizzi; although according to the Teacher he is a worthy, experienced, and venerable old man. The mayor suffers from gout and receives K. in bed; he explains to K. why he is not needed as a land surveyor. He offers K. the job of school janitor to the dismay of the Teacher. |
Mizzi, the mayor's wife | The wife and assistant of the Mayor, Gardena refers to her as the one who does the work. |
Klamm | An elusive castle official who is K.'s Castle Authority. Like the other Castle officials in the book, his actual area of expertise is never mentioned. K. spends a large portion of the novel trying to secure a meeting with Klamm. K., it seems, fixes many of his hopes for a successful resolution to his problems upon this meeting with Klamm. He has at least two secretaries—Erlanger (First Secretary) and Momus.
In Czech (and Kafka was able to speak and read/write Czech) "klam" means "illusion." In Praha Prague the Clam-Gallas Palace is of the same sound and may have influenced Kafka to use this multiple meaning of the Clam-Klamm, Clam-Gallas Palace (Prague) and Eduard Clam-Gallas |
Momus, Klamm's secretary | A young gentleman, extremely good-looking, pale and reddish; handles all written work for and receives all petitions to Klamm. He is also secretary for Vallabene, who is not mentioned again in the novel. He insists on interrogating K., who refuses to submit. |
Erlanger, Klamm's secretary | The First Secretary of Klamm who is sent to "interrogate" K, but only gives him a short message. |
Olga, Barnabas' sister | The older sister of Amalia and Barnabas. She helps K. on his quest, partly by telling him the story of why her family is considered outcasts and by teaching him some of the village customs. |
Amalia, Barnabas' sister | Younger sister of Barnabas and Olga. She was disgraced in the village after rudely turning down a summons from the castle official Sortini for sexual favors. |
Barnabas' Father | The father of Olga, Amalia and Barnabas. Past village cobbler and notable fireman. After Amalia's disgraceful interactions with Sortini's messenger, his business is ruined and he is stripped of his fire credentials. He is rendered an invalid after unsuccessfully trying to obtain a pardon for his family. |
Barnabas' Mother | The mother of Olga, Amalia and Barnabas. |
Otto Brunswick, son-in-law of Lasemann (brother-in-law of Lasemann in Harman edition) |
Hans Brunswick's father. Opportunistically takes over Barnabas' father's customers as the Barnabas family falls into disrepute from Amalia's rude treatment of Sortini's Messenger. According to the Mayor, Brunswick was the only person in the village that desired that a land surveyor be hired. No reason for this is given. |
Frau Brunswick | Hans Brunswick's Mother. She refers to herself as "from the castle" and is the only reference to a female at the castle. K. believes that she may assist him in gaining access to the castle. |
Hans, a sympathetic student | A student at the school where K is a janitor. Offers to help K and K uses him to attempt to find ways to get to the castle through his mother. |
Herrenhof Landlord | Landlord of the Herrenhof Inn. |
Herrenhof Landlady | Well dressed landlady at the Herrenhof Inn. Seems to be the matriarch of the Inn (as is Gardena at the Bridge Inn). Is distrustful of K. |
Galater | He is the castle official that assigned the assistants to K. He was also "rescued" by Barnabas' father in a minor fire at the Herrenhof Inn. |
Brügel (Bürgel in Harman edition) |
A Secretary of a castle official, Friedrich. Friedrich is not mentioned again in the book, but in deleted text is referred to as an official who is falling out of favor.[15] Brügel is a long-winded secretary who muses about Castle interrogations with K, when the latter errantly enters his room at the Herrenhof Inn. He indirectly offers to help K., however K is so tired that he does not accept the offer. |
Sordini | An Italian castle secretary of formidable abilities, though he is kept in the lowest position of all, he exhaustively manages any transactions at the castle for his department and is suspicious of any potential error. |
Sortini | Castle official associated with the village fire brigade who solicits Amalia with a sexually explicit and rude request to come to his room at the Herrenhof. |
Teacher | A young, narrow-shouldered, domineering little man. When K. becomes the janitor at the school, the teacher becomes K.'s de facto superior. He does not approve of K. working at the school, but does not appear to have the authority to terminate K's appointment. |
Miss Gisa (Fräulein Gisa), the school mistress | Tall, blond and beautiful if rather stiff assistant school teacher who is courted by Schwarzer and also dislikes K. |
Schwarzer | An under-castellan's son who appears to have given up living in the castle to court Miss Gisa and become her student teacher; is prone to outbursts of official arrogance. |
Pepi | Small, rosey and healthy; a chambermaid who is promoted to Frieda's barmaid position when the latter leaves her position at the Herrenhoff to live with K. She was a chambermaid with Emilie and Hennriette. |
Lasemann, a tanner, father-in-law of Otto Brunswick (brother-in-law of Otto Brunswick in Harman edition) |
Slow and dignfied, the village tanner whose house K. rests in for a few hours during on his first full day in the village. |
Gerstacker, a Coachman | Initially suspicious of K. but gives him a free sleigh back to the Bridge Inn after refusing to provide a ride to the castle. At the end of the book attempts to befriend K. since he believes K. has clout with Erlanger. |
Seemann, the Fire Company chief | The fire chief who strips Barnabas' father of his fireman diploma after Barnabas' family falls into shame from Amalia's rude treatment of Sortini's Messenger. |
Major themes
Theological
It is well documented that Brod's original construction was based on religious themes and this was furthered by the Muirs in their translations. But it has not ended with the Critical Editions. Numerous interpretations have been made with a variety of theological angles.
One interpretation of K.'s struggle to contact the castle is that it represents a man's search for salvation.[16] According to Mark Harman, translator of a recent edition of The Castle, this was the interpretation favored by the original translators Willa and Edwin Muir, who produced the first English volume in 1925. Harman feels he has removed the bias in the translations toward this view, but many still feel this is the point of the book.
Fueling the biblical interpretations of the novel are the various names and situations. For example, the official Galater (the German word for Galatians), one of the initial regions to develop a strong Christian following from the work of Apostle Paul and his assistant Barnabas. The name of the messenger, Barnabas, for the same reason. Even the Critical Editions naming of the beginning chapter, "Arrival", among other things liken K. to an Old Testament messiah.[9] The source of the German word Kafka uses for "Land surveyor"; which is Mashoah, almost the same as Mashiah, is the Hebrew word for Messiah.[17]
Bureaucracy
The obvious thread throughout The Castle is bureaucracy. The extreme degree is nearly comical and the village residents' justifications of it are amazing. Hence it is no surprise that many feel that the work is a direct result of the political situation of the era in which it was written, which was shot through with anti-Semitism, remnants of the Habsburg bureaucracy, etc.[18][19]
But even in these analyses, the veiled references to more sensitive issues are pointed out. For instance, the treatment of the Barnabas family, with their requirement to first prove guilt before they could request a pardon from it and the way their fellow villagers desert them have been pointed out as a direct reference to the anti-Semitic climate at the time.[20]
In a review of the novel found in The Guardian, William Burrows disputes the claim that The Castle deals with bureaucracy, claiming that this view trivialises Kafka's literary and artistic vision, while being "reductive". He claims, on the other hand, that the book is about solitude, pain, and the desire for companionship.[21]
Allusions to other works
Critics often talk of The Castle and The Trial in concert, highlighting the struggle of the protagonist against a bureaucratic system and standing before the law's door unable to enter as in the parable of the priest in The Trial.[18]
In spite of motifs common with other works of Kafka, The Castle is quite different from The Trial. While K., the main hero of The Castle, faces similar uncertainty and difficulty in grasping the reality that suddenly surrounds him, Josef K., the protagonist of The Trial, seems to be more experienced and emotionally stronger. On the other hand, while Josef K.'s surroundings stay familiar even when strange events befall him, K. finds himself in a new world whose laws and rules are unfamiliar to him.
Publication history
Muir translation
In 1930 Willa and Edwin Muir translated the First German edition of The Castle as it was compiled by Max Brod. It was published by Secker & Warburg in England and Alfred A. Knopf in the United States. 1941 edition was the edition that fed the Kafka post-war craze. The 1941 edition included a homage by Thomas Mann.
In 1954 the "Definitive" edition was published and included additional sections Brod had added to the Schocken Definitive German edition. The new sections were translated by Eithne Wilkins and Ernst Kaiser. Some edits were made in the Muir text namely the changes were "Town Council" to "Village Council", "Superintendent" to "Mayor", "Clients" to "Applicants".[12]
The 1994 edition, the current publication, contains a preface by Irving Howe.
The Muir translations make use of wording that is often considered "spiritual" in nature. In one notable example, the Muirs translate the description of the castle as "soaring unfalteringly" where Harman uses "tapered decisively".[22] Furthermore, the word "illusory" is used from the opening paragraph forward. Some critics note this as further evidence of the bias in the translation leaning toward a mystical interpretation.[1]
Harman translation
In 1926 Max Brod persuaded Kurt Wolff to publish the first German edition of The Castle in his publishing house. Due to its unfinished nature and his desire to get Kafka's work published, Max Brod took some editorial freedom.
In 1961 Malcolm Pasley was able to gain control of the manuscript, along with most of the other Kafka writings (save The Trial) and had it placed in the Oxford's Bodleian library. There, Pasley headed a team of scholars and recompiled Kafka's works into the Critical Edition. The Castle Critical Edition, in German, consists of two volumes—the novel in one volume and the fragments, deletions and editor's notes in a second volume. They were published by S. Fischer Verlag in 1982, hence occasionally referred to as the "Fischer Editions".
Mark Harman used the first volume of this set to create the 1998 edition of The Castle, often refer to as based on the "Restored Text" or the "English Critical Edition". Unlike the Muir translation, the fragments, deletions, and editor's notes are not included. According to the Publisher's Note:
"We decided to omit the variants and passages deleted by Kafka that are included in Pasley's second volume, even though variants can indeed shed light on the genesis of literary texts. The chief objective of this new edition, which is intended for the general public, is to present the text in a form that is as close as possible to the state in which the author left the manuscript."[23]
Harman has received general acceptance of his translation as being technically accurate and true to the original German. He has, though, received criticism for, at times not creating the prosaic form of Kafka.[1] Some of this is due, as with Muir's translations, on accusations that Pasley compilations are also inaccurate, although better than Brod's.[11]
As noted in the Table of Contents above, Harman includes an eleven-page discussion on his philosophy behind the translation. This section provides significant information about the method he used and his thought process. There are numerous examples of passages from Pasley, Muir's translation and his translation to provide the reader with a better feel for the work. As referenced above, some feel that his (and the publisher's) praise for his work and his "patronizing" of the Muirs goes a little too far.[1]
Underwood translation
A translation by J. A. Underwood was published in 1997 and 2000 (ISBN 978-0-14-018504-1) by Penguin in the UK.
Adaptations
The book was adapted by German director Rudolf Noelte into a film released in 1968. It was also filmed by Austrian director Michael Haneke in 1997 under the original German title Das Schloß, starring Ulrich Mühe as K.[24] There is a 1994 Russian movie adaptation, The Castle, directed by Aleksei Balabanov.[25] Another less-well-known adaptation was also made in Russia in 1994, called The Land Surveyor (Землемер). It was a 46-minute-long animation created at Diogen Studio and directed by Dmitriy Naumov and Valentin Telegin. In Finland Jaakko Pakkasvirta directed an adaptation called Linna in 1986. In the film, the main character's name was *Josef K*, which is the protagonist of Kafka's novel The Trial.
An Off-Broadway stage version (starring Jim Parsons and William Atherton), written and produced by David Fishelson, achieved success in early 2002, receiving nominations for "Best Off-Broadway Play" by the Outer Critics Circle, as well as for "Best Play" by the Drama League (both New York theatre awards). The play was published by Dramatists Play Service in 2002.[26][27][28][29]
A 120-minute-long French radio adaptation, written by Stephane Michaka and directed by Cedric Aussir, was aired by France Culture in 2010.
In 2012, American author (also of Introducing Kafka) David Zane Mairowitz released a graphic novel version of "The Castle" in conjunction with Czech artist and musician, Jaromír 99 (Jaromír Švejdík).[30] In 2013, versions were released in German ("Das Schloss") and Czech ("Zámek").
The novel was adapted for radio in May 2015 in two parts by Ed Harris on BBC Radio 4.[31] The cast included Dominic Rowan as "K", Sammy T. Dobson as Frieda, Mark Benton as Jeremias, Daniel Weyman as Artur, Stephen Greif as Teacher, Rachel Bavidge as Gardena/Amalia, Victoria Elliott as Olga, Neil Grainger as Barnabas. Jonathan Cullen as Chief Superintendent and Dominic Deakin as Hans.
Allusions to The Castle in other works
A story similar to that of The Castle is told in the British television series The Prisoner. In the late 1970s, an unlicensed computer game spin-off of The Prisoner took things one step further by incorporating elements of The Castle into the gameplay.
The Castle is also referred to in Lawrence Thornton's Imagining Argentina. A professor is arrested under suspicion of subversive activities. He tells the authorities he has been meeting Dostoyevsky, Koestler and Camus at a place called "the Castle". The main character's cat is also named Kafka.
Although not expressly stated as such, the Steven Soderbergh film Kafka from 1991, starring Jeremy Irons, incorporates the basic thematic elements of The Castle as well as allusions to Kafka's own life as a writer and his collected works. The title character, "Kafka", an insurance company clerk by day and a writer by night, lives and works in the shadow of the mysterious Castle, which rules over the life and death of the local citizenry through a seemingly incomprehensibly complex conspiracy of bureaucracy and cover-ups.
Iain Banks's novel Walking on Glass has characters who find themselves in a situation similar to K.'s: trapped in a castle, subject to arbitrary and bizarre rules which they must obey in order to find a way of leaving, and surrounded by "servants" who comply entirely with the rules by which the castle is run. The allusion is made specific in one of the final chapters, where reading The Castle (along with The Trial and Titus Groan) is hinted at as a key to the characters' escape from their own castle.
K., the protagonist of J. M. Coetzee's The Life and Times of Michael K, attempts to live simply outside the governing system of war torn South Africa.
African-American author Richard Wright references The Castle in his autobiography Black Boy.
Gene Wolfe's novel There Are Doors contains numerous references to The Castle throughout, including a high-placed official known as Klamm, several characters referred to as "Herr K.," and an actual copy of Das Schloss found nailed to a table within a dream.
Argentinian writer Ernesto Sabato is said to be influenced by Kafka's existentialism. The main character in his novelle, "The Tunnel", is named Castel, presumably after Kafka's story title.
In Sion Sono's film Guilty of Romance, The Castle is a leitmotif that keeps recurring all along the story, since the initial crime scene, when the investigators find "castle" written in human blood on the wall. Later on Mitsuko, the associate professor, will persuade Izumo to join her in a psychological journey, whose ultimate scope is to find a metaphorical (and unreachable) place called "The Castle".
Episode 9 of season 2 of the TV show Fargo is titled "The Castle" in which one of the lead characters is caught in a bureaucratic conundrum.
In the lyrics of Destroyer (band)'s 2006 song "Rubies", the narrator references securing a room at The Castle. Daniel Bejar is known for the many literary allusions he implements into his lyrics.
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Ormsby.
- 1 2 The Castle 1968, p. vi, Publisher's note.
- ↑ The Castle 1968, p. xv, Translator's Preface.
- ↑ The Castle 1998, p. vii, Publisher's Note.
- ↑ The Castle 1968, p. iv, Publisher's note.
- 1 2 The Castle 1998, p. xi, Publisher's Note.
- ↑ "Israeli museum wants Kafka manuscript from Germany". cbc.ca. 25 October 2009. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
- ↑ The Castle 1998, p. xiv–xvii, Publisher's Note.
- 1 2 Heidsieck, pp. 1–15.
- ↑ Stepping into Kafka's head, Jeremy Adler, Times Literary Supplement, 13 October 1995
- 1 2 Scholars squabble in Kafkaesque drama, David Harrison, The Observer, 17 May 1998, S. 23
- 1 2 The Castle 1968, p. vii, Publisher's note.
- ↑ The Castle 1968, p. 428, Fragments.
- ↑ The Castle 1968, p. 395.
- ↑ The Castle 1968, p. 422, Passages Deleted by the Author.
- ↑ The Castle 1998, p. xviii, Translator's Preface.
- ↑ Rolleston, James. A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka. Reprinted ed. Columbia, S.C.: Camden House ;, 2006. Print.
- 1 2 Doctoral paper, Hartmut M. Rastalsky, 1997
- ↑ Heidsieck, p. .
- ↑ Heidsieck, pp. 11ff.
- ↑ Franz Kafka Winter Reads
- ↑ The Castle 1998, p. xvii, Translator's Preface.
- ↑ The Castle 1998, p. xii, Publisher's note.
- ↑ "Schloß, Das (1997)", IMDb. Retrieved 21 August 2008
- ↑ "Zamok (1994)", IMDb. Retrieved 21 August 2008
- ↑ Genzlinger, Neil (January 18, 2002). "A Kafkaesque Bureaucracy (Literally), Theater Review". The New York Times. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ↑ Jacobs, Leonard (April 17, 2002). "Outer Critics Circle Nominations Announced". Backstage. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ↑ Jones, Kenneth (April 28, 2003). "Drama League Nominees Include Enchanted, Albertine, Amour, Salome, Avenue Q". Playbill. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ↑ "David Fishelson playwright page". The Playwrights Database. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ↑ Launch: The Castle by Jaromír 99 and David Zane Mairowitz Self Made Hero
- ↑ http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05tbw1m
- Heidsieck, Arnold. "Community, Delusion and Anti-Semitism in Kafka's The Castle" (PDF).
- Kafka, Franz (1968). The Castle. New York, New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
- Kafka, Franz (1998). The Castle. Harman, Mark (trans.). New York, New York: Schocken Books.
- Ormsby, Eric (November 1998). "Franz Kafka & the trip to Spindemuhle". The New Criterion.
External links
German Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
- Kafka website
- Das Schloss, original German text
- Kafka Society of America
- "Franz Kafka's Quest for an Unavailable God", by Roz Spafford. A 1998 San Francisco Chronicle review of the Mark Harman translation.
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