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Conversations on Kafka
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Conversations on Kafka

Author: Oxford University

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Oxford Humanities explores approaches to Kafka and his most famous story "The Metamorphosis": how the text has itself been transformed into new forms like ballet, theatre and comic books; how Kafka’s work has been read, from ecological insights to questions of illness, humour, feminism or race; how writers from across the world have responded to him from J. M. Coetzee to the 'Brazilian Kafka' Clarice Lispector or Marie NDiaye; and finally how artists have 'written back' to Kafka from their own time and place from the Czech Republic, Spain or even a viral Facebook novel in Russia.

For the curious a reading list associated with this series is available on ORLO (see Related Links).

12 Episodes
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An in-depth exploration of the theme of transformation in Kafka's "The Metamorphosis". Why does Kafka's story still resonate today?
One of the most striking transformations of Kafka's most famous story is into an acclaimed performance for the Royal Ballet. This podcast discusses how thinking about movement in the story and the ballet offer insights into Gregor Samsa's transformation and what it is to be human. Please note, the audio version of this podcast episode contains references to visual content. To access the video version on the University of Oxford Podcasts site use the Video button, or if you're listening on Apple Podcasts please search for the video version of the series.
Kafka and Humour

Kafka and Humour

2024-06-0318:08

Award-winning comedian David Baddiel discusses the kinds of humour that operate in Kafka and how laughter and nightmare are often closer than you think
Kafka and Comics

Kafka and Comics

2024-06-0320:03

Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" has been translated into many languages and forms. This podcast explores Peter Kuper's graphic novel. Remembering Kafka's famous interdiction on illustrating the insect, we ask what is revealed when one turns Kafka's most famous story into a comic. Please note, the audio version of this podcast episode contains references to visual content. To access the video version on the University of Oxford Podcasts site use the Video button, or if you're listening on Apple Podcasts please search for the video version of the series.
Kafka and Race

Kafka and Race

2024-06-0320:47

The transformation that takes place in "The Metamorphosis" has been referenced in any number of recent works by writers that explore issues of race, otherness and power. This discussion asks why contemporary writers turn to Kafka to deal with a post-colonial legacy and focuses especially on French-Senegalese wrier Marie NDiyae.
Kafka and Ecology

Kafka and Ecology

2024-06-0321:33

Although Kafka does not treat environmental issues directly, his work has much to say about time, scale, uncertainty, inside and out and ecology in a broader sense, along our own position in a fragile world.
Kafka and Illness

Kafka and Illness

2024-06-0316:55

Using Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" as a starting point, this memoir of MS examines a range of lives and works to think through how illness challenges identity and how literature can help find a way through.
Dubbed "the Brazilian Kafka", the writer Clarice Lispector wrote an experimental text that seems to echo the "Metamorphosis" in a number of ways. This podcast explores the links between Kafka's story and this radical, exploratory, feminine version and what it tells us also about Kafka's original.
Nobel-prize winning author J. M. Coetzee has continued to reflect on and respond to Kafka in different ways throughout his life and work. This podcast teases out the similarities and explores Coetzee's treatment of animals, time and his narrative of diminution.
The figure of the sister, Greta Samsa, in Kafka's story "The Metamorphosis" has fascinated writers and thinkers since the story was written. This podcast focuses on Czech literature to see how the sister has taken on a life of her own after Kafka, raising issues of feminism, politics and the fall of Communism.
Two important works of modern Spanish literature both take their cue from Kafka's letters to his companion, the Czech writer, journalist and translator Milena Jesenska. This podcast asks why these writers have turned to Kafka's "Letters to Milena" to explore themes of memory, loss and the post-Holocaust legacy in Spain.
Although Kafka and his work was frowned on behind the iron curtain, his works had a remarkable subterranean currency. This podcast takes its cue from Kafka's story "The Judgement" to discuss the "letters" written back to Kafka from today's Russia.
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