Despite his great impact on the literary world, Franz Kafka
was a relatively "unknown" author during his life-time. He
published relatively few of his works, and those were
published in very limited runs, or in small literary
journals.
Franz Kafka born in Prague, July 3, 1883, the son of
Hermann and Julie Kafka. The oldest, he had three suriving
younger sisters. Valli, Elli, and Ottla. His father was a
self-made middle class Jewish merchant, who raised his
children in the hopes of assimilating them into the
mainstream society of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
The official ruling language of the empire was German, so
Franz attended German grammar school (Volksschule am
Fleischmarkt), and later the German Gymnasium (Altstädter
Deutsches Gymnasium). He finished his Doctorate of Law in
Prague, studying at the German language University (Die
deutsche Universität) there. He initially gained employment
at a private insurance firm Assicurazioni Generali and
then with the Arbeiter-Unfall-Versicherungs-Anstalt für
das Königreichs Böhmen in Prag
His Job at the Worker's Accident Insurance provided him
with a steady income and "regular" office hours, so that he
could dedicate his evenings to writing. His diaries contain
continuing accounts of his restlessness and sleeplessness
as he would work all night writing, only to return to the
office for the next day of work, throughly exhausted.
Although he spoke and wrote Czech fluently throughout his
life, his literary work was all completed in German.
He is known to have started writing at an early age, but
all of his earliest attempts were later destroyed. His
first pulished work came in 1907, and he continued to
publish throughout the next seventeen years, but most of
his works were published posthumously by his friend Max
Brod.
Kafka's relationship to his father dominates all
discussions of both his life and his work. See his Brief
an den Vater to get a feel for the relationship between
the thin, intellectual, and awkward Franz, and the robust,
loud, and corporal Father. The ideas of "father" and
"family" permeate the fabric of many of Kafka's texts,
either directly as in Das Urteil or Die Verwandlung or
more abstractly as in the cases of his two novels Der
Proceß and Das Schloß (which remained unpublished during
his lifetime)
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