Franz Kafka: Chronicler of Darkness

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  • čas přidán 9. 10. 2019
  • Check my other channel Geographics:
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    Credits:
    Host - Simon Whistler
    Author - Morris M.
    Producer - Jennifer Da Silva
    Executive Producer - Shell Harris
    Business inquiries to biographics.email@gmail.com
    Other Biographics Videos:
    Otto Skorzeny: The Most Dangerous Man in Europe
    • Otto Skorzeny: The Mos...
    Robert Hanssen: The FBI Mole who Spied for the KGB
    • Robert Hanssen: The FB...
    Source/Further reading:
    Highly-detailed bio (via the Kafka Museum in Prague): kafkamuseum.cz/en/franz-kafka...
    www.biography.com/writer/fran...
    www.britannica.com/biography/...
    www.kafka.org/index.php?biography
    Max Brod: www.britannica.com/biography/...
    Kafka and Felice Bauer: lithub.com/kafka-was-a-terrib...
    Meeting Felice: www.theguardian.com/books/201...
    The Judgement: www.thoughtco.com/judgment-st...
    Letter to his father (some extracts): www.brainpickings.org/2015/03...

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @senfulbeats8554
    @senfulbeats8554 Před 4 lety +2465

    The fact that Max Brod sorted out all Kafka's papers and organised his work into full-fledged stories in such a short period of time while also leaving his name off the cover of all the books, makes him a true friend and a real hero

    • @sheldonwheaton881
      @sheldonwheaton881 Před 3 lety +42

      Like August Derleth with Lovecraft's works!👻

    • @kevinwebster7868
      @kevinwebster7868 Před 3 lety +11

      Plot twist. He actually was the author.

    • @toomuchquixotry-angad7408
      @toomuchquixotry-angad7408 Před 3 lety

      @@The_Real_H can't tell if ur joking or not hahaha, I'm researching on kafka, cre to elaborate?

    • @leighfoulkes7297
      @leighfoulkes7297 Před 3 lety +17

      Kind of. He did get all the money and he did write endings to works that never had any (claiming he Kafka told him how they would end). But yet, we wouldn't have anything without him and Kafka wouldn't be known today.

    • @leighfoulkes7297
      @leighfoulkes7297 Před 3 lety +4

      @@toomuchquixotry-angad7408 It is true and there is a weird documentary that makes it seem like the story isn't true.

  • @TruthNeverFade
    @TruthNeverFade Před 3 lety +428

    When I read Kafka for the first time, it was a mandatory class in school. I expected it to be super boring. But as an angsty, bullied, lonely teenager with a jerk as a father, I felt like he was there sitting next to me. I felt understood for the first time really.

  • @amb163
    @amb163 Před 4 lety +1238

    He's right up there with people like Van Gogh, who lived such miserable lives only to be marveled at long after anyone could help them see better things.

    • @ezdeuce1818
      @ezdeuce1818 Před 4 lety +21

      Aye, that tragic state of events has plauged many great creators and artists.
      Ill never forget the first time i read "A Confederacy of Dunces" and then decided to look up what other great works John Kennedy Toole published only to discover that it was published posthumously by his mother and that the neon bible was worth a read but was written as a teenager and was more interesting as a taste of his particular flavor of the medium rather than a glimpse of future genius.
      I was genuinely bummed out.

    • @shesaknitter
      @shesaknitter Před 4 lety +23

      I love "A Confederacy of Dunces" so much that I buy copies and give them to people. Toole's tragedy was that he was a gay man in a time when, more than now, society was really horrible to gay people. He wound up killing himself after which his mother went to publisher after publisher to try to get the book published. The book was rejected many times until she did find a publisher and it then went on to win a Pulitzer Prize. A heartbreaking background to the funniest book I've ever read.
      From the book's forward: "The tragedy of the book is the tragedy of the author -- his suicide in 1969 at the age of thirty-two. Another tragedy is the body of work we have been denied."

    • @amb163
      @amb163 Před 4 lety +1

      @Joe Frang Maurice Sendak?

    • @aldoushuxley5953
      @aldoushuxley5953 Před 3 lety +2

      Also Lovecraft.
      Art seems like a bad career choice imo

    • @heathercontois4501
      @heathercontois4501 Před 3 lety

      Van Gogh was a drunk pervert whose work wasn't famous until years after his death.

  • @WonderWhatHappened
    @WonderWhatHappened Před 3 lety +679

    I like to think I'm just like Kafka. Minus his intellect, writing ability, religion, career, disease, and friends. Other than that it's like looking in a mirror.

    • @aditi1729
      @aditi1729 Před 3 lety +31

      That way I’m very similar to Kafka as well haha. Who knows, you might possess something special to give to the world like Kafka too, you just don’t know it.

    • @WonderWhatHappened
      @WonderWhatHappened Před 3 lety +20

      @@aditi1729 That ship has sailed. :)

    • @WarHammer1989
      @WarHammer1989 Před 3 lety +11

      There will be many more like him. Our modern world will see to that.

    • @sheilagravely5621
      @sheilagravely5621 Před 2 lety

      Hahahaha, you so funny!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻💚💚💚👏👏👏👏🙏🙏😘

    • @africanwilddog6685
      @africanwilddog6685 Před 2 lety +6

      same though he has inspired me to work more with my little stories c:
      it’s weird how a smart melancholic man that lived long before i have had made me feel less lonely
      all this to say we’re not alone!! and, i think you’re not giving yourself enough credit!! :)

  • @SusanWillful
    @SusanWillful Před 3 lety +343

    Brilliant sentence:
    "To say Kafka found this job crushingly dull was to overstate how exciting it was."
    Beautiful writing!

  • @greghuffman3061
    @greghuffman3061 Před 4 lety +652

    Imagine all the great writers that might be known, but their writings were actually burned and thus we will never know what we missed out on.

    • @madamvaudelune3298
      @madamvaudelune3298 Před 4 lety +72

      That is why conservative or liberal, elitest or populist, whatever side of the fence you may be on, censorship is the enemy of us all. Whether you believe that 'one of the duties of the government is to protect it's people from verbal assault,' or 'We have a duty to society to preserve order by implementing standards that are acceptable-first the left's rationale for censorship, followed by the right's-both are wrong. I would rather be offended every day then see anyone censored. Whether we live with 'The Anarchist's Cookbook The Turner Diaries, etc. anything is preferable to censorship.

    • @Mew4U
      @Mew4U Před 4 lety +4

      Aw, that is sad to think about

    • @Mew4U
      @Mew4U Před 4 lety +3

      @Joe Frang TROLL

    • @Mew4U
      @Mew4U Před 4 lety +1

      @Joe Frang I can.

    • @Mew4U
      @Mew4U Před 4 lety

      @Joe Frang I can but I won't.

  • @MastaChiefa99
    @MastaChiefa99 Před 4 lety +1545

    11:00 I cant remember who said it, but introverts don't like to be alone, they like to be left alone.
    Edit: It was Audrey Hepburn

    • @ojutay8375
      @ojutay8375 Před 4 lety +121

      Can confirm. I prefer being left alone usually but I don't like being alone. Being alone sucks

    • @WavyHippie420
      @WavyHippie420 Před 4 lety +14

      Absolute truth

    • @John_shepard
      @John_shepard Před 4 lety +96

      Being alone yet having someone at reach. I am the same way

    • @MareCat31
      @MareCat31 Před 4 lety +13

      Totally identify with that mindset.

    • @veritasvincit2745
      @veritasvincit2745 Před 4 lety +8

      Yes, that's me. I will remember this quote. Thank you.

  • @saidtoshimaru1832
    @saidtoshimaru1832 Před 4 lety +386

    Kafka: Burn everything.
    Brod: Nope...

  • @ahobimo732
    @ahobimo732 Před 4 lety +80

    I think Kafka's pattern of fleeting infatuations with various women shows just how broken he was. He wanted connection so badly, but didn't have the psychological resources to maintain a stable relationship.
    Although he was a visionary and has become a literary giant, he was also just an ordinary man, whose life was tragic in ways that are common and familiar to us all.
    I think this is what makes Kafka's literary works so powerful: beneath all their surreal horror and dark absurdity lies the all too familiar pain of simply being human.

    • @johnkidby7948
      @johnkidby7948 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Reading this post it suddenly occurred to me that, if he were born in the last few decades, he probably would've wound up shouting his pain into the void and being dismissed as an angry incel, because that's the culture we live in now, which is in itself rather Kafkaesque.

    • @ahobimo732
      @ahobimo732 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@johnkidby7948 YES!!! The true horror of the nightmare is that it never acknowledges it's a nightmare.

  • @kanacubana827
    @kanacubana827 Před 4 lety +296

    Also, the rest of his family (including his beloved sister), and Jesenská (maybe his only girlfriend that he really loved) all died in the concentration camps during WW2. At least he didn't live to experience that.

  • @gizzymeows5847
    @gizzymeows5847 Před 4 lety +175

    It's heart wrenching to think his mother was too bullied by the Father to counter act the negativity that was ritually done to their son. It seems Kafka definitely desired intimacy but was broken. Thanks for sharing such a informative and sad story. 🤗🤗

    • @swymaj02
      @swymaj02 Před 4 lety +10

      Where is the mom, cos I haven't heard a single thing about her.

  • @jarrakferrodont3543
    @jarrakferrodont3543 Před 4 lety +721

    You, sir, are a brilliant storyteller.

  • @andrewquint7962
    @andrewquint7962 Před 4 lety +55

    I agree with Biographics’ comment that Kafka’s novel, The Trial, is essentially a Rorschach test that we all interpret in relation to our own lives. So on that note, I have always interpreted that novel as describing a futile attempt to defy death.
    Like all of life, Joseph K was condemned to death the day he was born, and like most of the rest of us, he spent the rest of his life trying to appeal that sentence, of course, to no avail.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 3 lety +72

    1:15 - Chapter 1 - Early years
    4:25 - Chapter 2 - Description of a struggle
    7:25 - Chapter 3 - The metamorphosis
    10:30 - Chapter 4 - A little woman
    13:55 - Chapter 5 - Kakfa's judgement
    16:55 - Chapter 6 - A hunger artist
    20:25 - Chapter 7 - The man who re appeared

  • @Spamhero
    @Spamhero Před 4 lety +71

    I read metamorphosis in my early years it kind of changed the way I looked at depression. Kafka had a special kind of magic.

    • @madisonfox9700
      @madisonfox9700 Před 2 lety +1

      Just finished reading it for my composition 2 class!!

    • @bluemoon3927
      @bluemoon3927 Před rokem

      I was first introduced to the works of Kafka through 'The Metamorphosis' I found it deeply moving and profoundly changed by it. Thank you Franz!

  • @MareCat31
    @MareCat31 Před 4 lety +238

    "The shared grave"
    Oh good god!! That's just horrifying!!

    • @LambentLark
      @LambentLark Před 4 lety +50

      Can't even escape in death. This guy couldn't catch a break.

    • @anthonyconde7604
      @anthonyconde7604 Před 4 lety +52

      But his name goes on top! It looks as if HE were the man of the house. Take that, dad!

    • @brianlamar223
      @brianlamar223 Před 4 lety +7

      @@anthonyconde7604 Franz is the man yes he is

    • @brianlamar223
      @brianlamar223 Před 4 lety +12

      @@LambentLark he deserves his own grave

    • @brianlamar223
      @brianlamar223 Před 4 lety +11

      Put him next to Orwell

  • @scotthenrie5674
    @scotthenrie5674 Před 4 lety +714

    I know this quote from him. “Truth is what every man needs in order to live, but can obtain or purchase from no one. Each man must reproduce it for himself from within, otherwise he must perish. Life without truth is not possible. Truth is perhaps life itself.”
    - Franz Kafka

    • @rosakami65
      @rosakami65 Před 4 lety +28

      Franz Kafka was ahead of his time probably more than most poets

    • @KP-ek9ok
      @KP-ek9ok Před 4 lety +6

      I suspect Kafka had 'a bit' of Aspergers

    • @schmickaussie1038
      @schmickaussie1038 Před 4 lety +6

      The nazis denied truth and faced ruin. The list of nazis who committed suicide speaks for itself... Life without truth is suicidal.

    • @franciscosamir5256
      @franciscosamir5256 Před 4 lety +1

      Schmick Aussie just like American soldiers now

    • @schmickaussie1038
      @schmickaussie1038 Před 4 lety

      @@franciscosamir5256 I'm not sure what you mean about American soldiers?

  • @oscarellenius2007
    @oscarellenius2007 Před 4 lety +881

    I know you have many requests but Fjodor Dostoevsky would be amazing to hear about

    • @mireillelebeau2513
      @mireillelebeau2513 Před 4 lety +25

      One of my favorites Russian author with Gogol

    • @kushanshah8040
      @kushanshah8040 Před 4 lety +8

      It's Fyodor Dostoevsky.

    • @avasilachi
      @avasilachi Před 4 lety +69

      @@kushanshah8040 there's many ways english language translates his name. some say Fyodor DostoYevsky, som Dostoevsky, or Dostoievski.. doesn't matter to me as long as you appreciate his work.. oh yeah and it's actually Фёдор Достоевский :))

    • @kushanshah8040
      @kushanshah8040 Před 4 lety +11

      Andrei Vasilachi Well, I'm taking a Russian's word for it! And yeah, I love him. I recently read 'Crime and Punishment' and I'm looking forward to reading his other work.

    • @avasilachi
      @avasilachi Před 4 lety +17

      @@kushanshah8040 Crime and Punishment is brilliant, one of his best-if not the best. His best, is arguably Brothers Karamazov, but it's even longer than Crime and Punishment :)

  • @wolfthequarrelsome504
    @wolfthequarrelsome504 Před 4 lety +45

    I read "the trial" as a law student recommended reading and noted the Kafka has a phd in jurisprudence...a rare thing even today.
    Later in legal practice I could see through the eyes of clients because of Franz Kafka.

  • @InVinoVeratas
    @InVinoVeratas Před 3 lety +41

    Man, a father like this, makes me glad my father was decidedly absent in my life. I’d rather nobody at all, than someone who actively despised me, who is supposed to look out for me.

  • @onichan2878
    @onichan2878 Před 3 lety +53

    Seems appropriate that in the end his father is seen as a boorish failure of a parent and yet his son is seen as a brilliant intellectual. Take that...dad.

  • @jimmyshrimbe9361
    @jimmyshrimbe9361 Před 4 lety +147

    So sad. Reminds me of Van Gogh.

  • @MFPhoto1
    @MFPhoto1 Před 3 lety +21

    I recently read Max Brod's biography of Kafka. Yes, there were down moments in Kafka's life, but Brod says he was not as depressed as many made him out to be. Often he actually enjoyed life.

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 Před 4 lety +57

    For a fascinating look at Franz Kafka the man, I highly recommend "Gespräche mit Kafka," by Gustav Janouch, the son of Kafka's insurance company boss in Prague. It has been excellently translated into English under the title "Conversations with Kafka." And by the way, unlike most German-speakers in Prague at the time, Kafka also put a lot of effort into learning Czech, at which he became fluent. (He was also studying Hebrew, since he hoped to emigrate to Palestine, as Simon Whistler mentions in this video.)

    • @johnwheatleywhite484
      @johnwheatleywhite484 Před 4 lety

      519DJW Don’t most Kafka critics question the validity of much of that work?

    • @519djw6
      @519djw6 Před 4 lety +1

      @@johnwheatleywhite484 Are you referring to Gustav Janouch's account? Actually, I had never heard of anyone questioning the validity of his work, but I may be mistaken, since I've only read Janouch's book, and am not a "Kafka scholar." Where have you read of doubts about the veracity of what Janouch wrote?

  • @TheIconicHat
    @TheIconicHat Před 4 lety +59

    My favorite short story of his is "Before the Law". Like two pages long but succinctly depressing

    • @arcsaberzslash
      @arcsaberzslash Před 4 lety

      Check out "Poseidon", that one was a good chuckle.

  • @anthonyholroyd5359
    @anthonyholroyd5359 Před 4 lety +58

    On the subject of existentialism and Absurdism I would be fascinated to see biographics episodes on Satre and Camus.

  • @alanmoss3603
    @alanmoss3603 Před 4 lety +36

    On a trip to Prague I visited Kafka's house - and his grave site. Also I never stomp on cockroaches 'caus, y'know, just in case! My favorite story is still The Burrow - the most paranoid thing I've ever read!

  • @Terelamans
    @Terelamans Před 4 lety +45

    Loved it. Loved him during my angst ridden teens. Understood him during my adulthood. Thanks!

  • @toxotesarcher7287
    @toxotesarcher7287 Před 4 lety +148

    "If you've ever suffered from an anxiety disorder, you'll know that 'suffer' is exactly the right word to use." Mmmmmmmhm!

    • @alexysq2660
      @alexysq2660 Před 4 lety +2

      ...Yeah; dear Simon....

    • @ThrottleKitty
      @ThrottleKitty Před 4 lety +11

      @Calladium Petals You are incredibly, factually, hurtfully wrong. You're repeating an archaic and ignorant stereotype that hurts millions of people for no reason other than your refusal to admit people might can feel things you haven't, despite overwhelming scientific evidence to the contrary. The tiniest, tiniest, TINIEST bit of research into the subject proves you overwhelmingly, fundamentally wrong. It's a physical, physiological reaction to a condition created within the brain after encountered severe or prolonged trauma. It's like you are saying people with allergies are just making it up for attention. I'm just flabbergasted people can still be this ignorant about such pervasive and abundant problems. So you are saying all those soldiers who come back form the war with mental health problems from the intense stress of killing people and being constantly shot at... are *just faking it?* Do you just wake up in the morning trying to find damaging and hateful opinions that make you look like a privileged, isolated little brat?
      Also, the drugs people take for anxiety medication aren't even the kind you "get high" on, on the occasion drugs are used they are mood stabilizers. It's just so profoundly ignorant to to think someone, let-alone millions of people, would fake a massive, life crippling condition to get a drug that only would help them if they had that condition and do nothing else. *Not to mention the physical reactions of anxiety are litterally impossible to fake and don't exist in people without it.*

    • @robertrichard6107
      @robertrichard6107 Před 4 lety

      @@ThrottleKitty I was going to take my warm sensitive man mask off and make a comment, bur I've changed my mind! LEAVE ME ALONE!

    • @corinnae.7877
      @corinnae.7877 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, it sucks because you achieved huge goals but one thing can happen that destroys everything you built.

    • @dannahbanana11235
      @dannahbanana11235 Před 3 lety

      The closest physical approximation to the dread it causes me is the dull, almost imperceptibly growing pain that my wisdom teeth caused me. It got so intense and when I finally got relief it was a whole world of difference. It slowly cripples you and you don't even realize there's something wrong. Thank God for therapy and meds lol.

  • @catherinepisces2107
    @catherinepisces2107 Před 4 lety +19

    Excellent explanation of Kafka s life. I still shudder at the picture of his shared grave. How fitting though.

  • @commbruce
    @commbruce Před 4 lety +46

    “Gregor Samsor awoke one morning to discover he had been turned into a giant cockroach. Nah, too good!” The Producers

  • @KRYSTYNDA
    @KRYSTYNDA Před 4 lety +7

    Beautifully done, as always. Thank you!

  • @crescentmoondesigns7515
    @crescentmoondesigns7515 Před 4 lety +185

    His father stole his life away what a shame

    • @trudytriad4574
      @trudytriad4574 Před 4 lety +2

      💔

    • @Life_Of_Mine_
      @Life_Of_Mine_ Před 4 lety +18

      @james83925 or maybe his genius would have flourished in another writing style.

    • @MeTaLISaWeSoMe95
      @MeTaLISaWeSoMe95 Před 3 lety +1

      @james83925 and yet again, it is a shame. Kafka lived in hell and died in hell, and felt his life was as horrible as any of his writings protagonists.

    • @HermeticWorlds
      @HermeticWorlds Před 3 lety +5

      @illegit You're being antisemitic, you must not generalise about a whole culture/group of people, especially calling Jewish people 'peculiar', it's wrong.

    • @debradonley3825
      @debradonley3825 Před 3 lety

      Well, he rather let him, didn't he?

  • @anthonylogan4730
    @anthonylogan4730 Před 4 lety +39

    Yes!!! One of the channels' that I look forward to most putting out content

  • @misterfeola9268
    @misterfeola9268 Před 4 lety +1

    Some of your best work!!!!
    Thank you so much again for everything you provided us.

  • @pink_alligator
    @pink_alligator Před 3 lety +5

    "You'll know that Suffering, is the right term to use" dang that hit me
    never heard it phrased like that before, it's perfect

  • @bradcupitt5314
    @bradcupitt5314 Před 4 lety +8

    really enjoy your presentations, loving this bio channel and your speaking voice is on point
    Keep up the good work 👍

  • @rachellel
    @rachellel Před 4 lety +39

    His father's description sounds like he was an ouvert narcissist.

  • @Matisto1
    @Matisto1 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for this Simon, having visited Prague a few years ago I always wondered about Kafka's life. So this video was perfect!

  • @joshwilliams8507
    @joshwilliams8507 Před 4 lety +23

    While I appreciate the effort in making the interesting biography, I think you very much over-state his father's cruelties and the sufferings of Kafkas outward life.
    He lived very 'normally', like millions of others. It was his MIND that was extraordinary. It was his stark and nauseous perception of the everyday existence of modern man, combined with his unique ability to paint nightmarishly reflective prose.
    His true genius was his recognition of the nightmare in the mundane that we FEEL but cannot articulate.

    • @js66613
      @js66613 Před 3 lety +6

      Haven't you ever read the letter to his father...?

  • @dfailsthemost
    @dfailsthemost Před 3 lety +23

    I think Kafka's sense of humor is underappreciated. I honestly think he'd be a comic today.

  • @akinyeleakinruntan3496
    @akinyeleakinruntan3496 Před 4 lety +7

    one of my favorite authors...im sooo happy you made this simon

  • @joshuam6058
    @joshuam6058 Před 4 lety +5

    Reading his works now... never felt so depressed and/or frustrated reading, yet I cant stop. Definitely a good move by his friend to publish his works!!

  • @willysweetwonkajoe1432
    @willysweetwonkajoe1432 Před 4 lety +44

    Franz Kafka: "I LOVE YOU AND I WANNA MARRY YOU AND SPEND THE REST OF MY LIFE WITH YOU"
    ...5 hours later...
    Franz Kafka: "YOU KNOW WHAT, I BEEN THINKING ABOUT THIS WHOLE MARRIAGE THING AND ITS NOT YOU, ITS ME"

    • @chasechilly9451
      @chasechilly9451 Před 6 dny

      Bauer:
      "Kafka,
      Fuj.
      (Yikes)
      S pozdravem~
      (Warmest Regards~)"

  • @TheRuzzleFumpz
    @TheRuzzleFumpz Před 4 lety +5

    Hey Simon! It’s really easy to just zone out and watch so many of these biographics videos one after another. I do have a recommendation for a video, I feel the narrative and story of Tokyo Rose is super interesting. I havent ever heard of her till particularly recently, and feel her story needs more light! Thanks again for the content and good work.

  • @mikehydropneumatic2583
    @mikehydropneumatic2583 Před 4 lety +25

    01:44 that house is now a shop where can you buy Kafka books, bought Der Prozess there myself.
    Other than that Prague is a beautifull city to visit.

  • @ddoyle11
    @ddoyle11 Před 4 lety

    One of your best, Simon. Thank you.

  • @Fabian-ed9tp
    @Fabian-ed9tp Před 4 lety

    Amazing video. Very insightful and informative. Thank you

  • @semi-trad-kind-of-wife
    @semi-trad-kind-of-wife Před 4 lety +33

    His life was so sad. Had he been a more nurturing father, Kafka might have had a very different life experience.
    It was a different time though, casual abuse and cruelty to children was far more common and even acceptable in certain circles. Doesn't make it right though

    • @femifamutimi8833
      @femifamutimi8833 Před 4 lety +5

      While his father's was completely odious, I do wonder if he'd have created the same works if he had been happier
      This of course isn't to say it was okay

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Před 3 lety +2

      Read about Hitler's father, strangely similar.

  • @joeyr7294
    @joeyr7294 Před 4 lety +28

    I know it sounds cold, but the way the violin just stopped playing killed me lol

  • @bellaferelli751
    @bellaferelli751 Před 3 lety

    Thanks as always for the excellent content ❤️ I LOVE GEO/BIOGRAPHICS!

  • @ollywurk
    @ollywurk Před 4 lety

    excellent video, as always the research is spot on.

  • @vanessathomas7437
    @vanessathomas7437 Před 4 lety +21

    Absolutely fascinating, Simon! You have a way of taking a dull bio and bring LIFE to it!
    Always waiting for your next upload!

  • @t.c.7968
    @t.c.7968 Před 4 lety +26

    YES, THANK YOU! I have been waiting for this biographic for so long! Kafka is such an amazing author and a fascinating person. He is truly life changing, my favorite author

  • @vladpuha
    @vladpuha Před 4 lety

    Simon, thank you for your great work. and for covering F. Kafka!

  • @clovergum
    @clovergum Před 4 lety

    I love this channel sm. So informative. It deserves more recognition.

  • @johgu92
    @johgu92 Před 4 lety +16

    Probably one of the only authors I enjoyed while reading in school.

  • @AsepTravels
    @AsepTravels Před 3 lety +9

    Terribly sad how so many of history’s greatest artists lived horrible lives and only get recognized for their great work after their death. If only they saw how much their work resonates with so many people around the world and how much they’re admired. But then again as sinister as it may sound, I think artists in general create their best work in their darkest hours, because it often becomes their only light in that darkness.

    • @iKyuubi1995
      @iKyuubi1995 Před 3 lety +1

      We are created and molded by consequences, some not our own

  • @galss44
    @galss44 Před 3 lety

    thank you for making this video.

  • @josephertz2226
    @josephertz2226 Před 3 lety

    Really enjoyed this thank you

  • @prof2yousmithe444
    @prof2yousmithe444 Před 4 lety +5

    Geographic's is an excellent source of material on many famous, and infamous, people!

  • @ShadowofSun2012
    @ShadowofSun2012 Před 4 lety +4

    How many channels can you manage, dear lord! And they're all so good!

  • @husseinm.4723
    @husseinm.4723 Před 4 lety

    Thank you very much.. Appreciate your enlightening work!

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 Před 4 lety

    A marvellous Bio ! Really enjoyed . Thanks .

  • @meirwise1107
    @meirwise1107 Před 4 lety +32

    I bought an interesting mug in Prague with Kafka's image half in black and half in white on it. Every time I drank from it, I lifted it up and shouted "alienation"! Kafka was one of the greatest writers of all time.

    • @margin606
      @margin606 Před 3 lety +4

      Sounds pretty weird. But cool.

    • @TheNheg66
      @TheNheg66 Před 2 lety

      Weird flex but ok :D

  • @esteban20969564
    @esteban20969564 Před 4 lety +3

    i really love this episode, i need to read his work now!

  • @Claytone-Records
    @Claytone-Records Před 4 lety

    I have been waiting for this one. Thanks Team Whistler.

  • @JM-ig8mf
    @JM-ig8mf Před 4 lety

    Short, informative and very well presented documentary. Thank you.

  • @artkoenig9434
    @artkoenig9434 Před 4 lety +17

    A depressing story well told. Thank you!

  • @Wil_Dasovich
    @Wil_Dasovich Před 4 lety +216

    I thought i was watching Vsauce till he started speaking in an English accent

  • @vrtgarden1
    @vrtgarden1 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much for this biography!

  • @ahernandez50
    @ahernandez50 Před 4 lety

    Simon, I just love your work and the style with which you present it. Great job, please keep bringing these amazing productions, which in time of virus lockdown are a small source of joy in an otherwise brain-devouring period.

  • @alexanderleuchte5132
    @alexanderleuchte5132 Před 4 lety +161

    "When Gregor Samsa woke up one morning from troubled dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a monstrous bug. He lay on his armour like, hard back and saw, if he raised his head a little, his arched abdomen divided up into rigid bow-like sections on top of which the blanket, ready to slide off completely, could barely hold on. His many legs, miserably thin compared to the size of the rest of his circumference, flickered helplessly before his eyes."

    • @bigtimepimpin666
      @bigtimepimpin666 Před 4 lety +9

      Headed to Iraq, the first time, our plane was stranded in Prague. The women, even most of the beautiful ones, had ankles and the food was all pork sausages. I looked out into the streets and all I could think of was Kafka. And I expected to see huge cockroaches on the street who were formerly humans... Kafka is one of the most im important authors of the XX century.

    • @KoalaMarch77
      @KoalaMarch77 Před 4 lety +4

      in german you pleb.

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods Před 4 lety +2

      Years ago we saw ballet dancer Baryshnikov do this off Broadway ...all I recall was him crawling on the floor alot . Can't recall much else , except him ocassionally leaning , climbing on this piece of wooden or metal slats .

    • @MareCat31
      @MareCat31 Před 4 lety +2

      @108johnny awww,that's sweet...

    • @TheLoxxxton
      @TheLoxxxton Před 4 lety +3

      What would kafka make of the simons predicament? A bleak tale on man's hard labour endlessly churning out facts to an ignorent population. Whipped onwards by ever crueler and demanding shadowey over lords.

  • @dinnerwithfranklin2451
    @dinnerwithfranklin2451 Před 4 lety +4

    Since I first read him Kafka has always been one of my favourite authors. It seems to me that many of his works speak even more loudly than ever before.

  • @1227Athena
    @1227Athena Před 4 lety +1

    Ohhh I loved it so much. Thank you for the precious 23 mins greatly.

  • @ArtByHazel
    @ArtByHazel Před 2 lety +2

    Glad that Franz shared his battle with illness and darkness.
    It is where beauty, resilience, strength to choose to live and find light within eventually.
    If only we can threw all stigmas about mental illness and judging each other for those who suffered in silence.
    Great video. Thank you.

  • @nicktanner8827
    @nicktanner8827 Před 4 lety +5

    Another great one, what about doing one on the Kray Twins?

  • @aldoushuxley5953
    @aldoushuxley5953 Před 4 lety +119

    Can you please do Aldouis Huxley?
    I think Brave new world is more relevant now, then ever before

    • @Claytone-Records
      @Claytone-Records Před 4 lety

      Brendan Cronin, 1984 Orwell.

    • @aldoushuxley5953
      @aldoushuxley5953 Před 4 lety +5

      And his life in general was very interesting, the whole mescalin Thing and so on.
      One might even consider a teamup Episode with Orwell and Huxley, as they were rivals/teacher and student

    • @paigehamilton4772
      @paigehamilton4772 Před 4 lety

      Burma Days is my favorite

    • @BastardX13
      @BastardX13 Před 4 lety +2

      Find a copy of Huxleys follow up "Brave New World revisited. It was an update to the first book. Hauntingly prophetic.

    • @seansabu310
      @seansabu310 Před 3 lety +1

      "I can foresee man happy in his slavery...." Also is Huxley that would be quite scintillating Huxley is prophetic and darkly beautiful without literature We are all ensnared

  • @joedoe783
    @joedoe783 Před 4 lety

    Excellent video. Really enjoyed it.

  • @villafoo
    @villafoo Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the new video. Now I want to read his books!

  • @elizabethnash7491
    @elizabethnash7491 Před 4 lety +6

    Fantastic - beautifully written and perfectly presented..... Are there any plans to cover Cervantes?

  • @justinweber4977
    @justinweber4977 Před 4 lety +116

    This reminds me, i have a copy of "The Metamorphosis" I need to finally get around to reading.

    • @scotthenrie5674
      @scotthenrie5674 Před 4 lety +12

      Here's a reminder to start reading it. 😜

    • @b.griffin317
      @b.griffin317 Před 4 lety +4

      don't forget the others when you're done. the trial and the castle especially.

    • @justinweber4977
      @justinweber4977 Před 4 lety

      @@b.griffin317 I'll make certain to add them to the list. I'd imagine I can still find them in print somewhere!

    • @KP-ek9ok
      @KP-ek9ok Před 4 lety +3

      I read it about 30 years ago as part of an English lit course. (It wasn't even one of the required reading subjects) I LOVED IT, and have read it 3 more times since then

    • @THEAmateurSommelier
      @THEAmateurSommelier Před 4 lety +2

      It's weird. Fair warning

  • @7ismersenne
    @7ismersenne Před 4 lety

    Thank you for a eloquent, moving and fitting tribute

  • @ashernovotny4757
    @ashernovotny4757 Před 4 lety

    What a great way to describe anxiety. And I thank you for taking it seriously.

  • @n3v3rg01ngback
    @n3v3rg01ngback Před 4 lety +358

    I don’t like being alone, but the idea of having to be around people is just vulgar.

    • @LambentLark
      @LambentLark Před 4 lety +39

      There is a vast pit of dispare between being alone and being lonely. I have been 100 mi. from any road or man and I was content and engaged with my own company. I have never felt more alone and overwelmed than I did walking in NYC at 5pm. Is it because I am completely socially awkward or that I enjoy my own company and like to let my mind roam unrestrained? Most likely both. The thing is, when everyone else is gone, I am always here.

    • @jason8571
      @jason8571 Před 4 lety +19

      That’s why I have a dog

    • @teddammit5179
      @teddammit5179 Před 4 lety +16

      @@LambentLark You're not alone. I used to have to go to fucking Manhattan on business, and I never felt more loneliness or depression when doing so. A stinking miserable hovel.

    • @eval_is_evil
      @eval_is_evil Před 4 lety +5

      Nice play of words 😄
      Edit : vulgar in Latin means from/of the people . That's why i assumed it was a joke. A good one too :)

    • @garretth8224
      @garretth8224 Před 4 lety

      @@LambentLark You sure you don't have a personality disorder?

  • @GamingBear_Q_E_D
    @GamingBear_Q_E_D Před 4 lety +3

    WOW Thank you for all you do, really appreciate watching ;)

  • @SuperWarbringer666
    @SuperWarbringer666 Před 4 lety

    Fantastic summary of his life!!! Great job!

  • @Mark-im6pm
    @Mark-im6pm Před 4 lety

    Brilliant. This piece about Kafka may be you finest. Thank you.

  • @bigtimepimpin666
    @bigtimepimpin666 Před 4 lety +5

    2:33 music... damn!!! I need to read Kafka's " letters to my father"

  • @johnhill8396
    @johnhill8396 Před 4 lety +29

    I'm very surprised he never made mention of the word named after Kafka: Kafkaesque

    • @Zainab-ox2pq
      @Zainab-ox2pq Před 4 lety +1

      Same! Partly why I watched this, in the hope some context would be shone on this

    • @professorsogol5824
      @professorsogol5824 Před 4 lety

      @@Zainab-ox2pq I trust you are being facetious. This, from Kafka's diary, repunctuated, might provide the light you seek "I wrote the last sentence, turning out the light and the light of day. The slight pains around my heart."

  • @michaelpanzarella7490
    @michaelpanzarella7490 Před 4 lety +2

    I went to Prague earlier this year and went to the museum . This really surpasses what I learned at the museum ! Thank you

  • @JohnVKaravitis
    @JohnVKaravitis Před 4 lety

    Superb video. Thank you.

  • @milkultraviolence7808
    @milkultraviolence7808 Před 4 lety +5

    i just wanna give him a hug

    • @margin606
      @margin606 Před 3 lety

      @MILK ULTRA VIOLENCE - he wouldn't appreciate it

  • @Mutilatrix
    @Mutilatrix Před 3 lety +5

    I have a footnote:
    On the letter to his father, while he /did/ ultimately forego sending it, there's some important nuance which gives Franz's home situation more detail.
    When he completed the letter, he actually did give it to his mother with instructions to give to his father. Kafka fully intended to send it and have his reckoning in whatever form it would come. He showed remarkable courage and resolve.
    The problem was that his mother, acting like an enabler-- and I think it's reasonable to think that this his mother's passivity must have been an enabling factor of the abuse he suffered in his formative years-- advised him that he shouldn't upset his father with such unnecessary emotional trifles. The letter going unsent was the result of his mother's "why bring this on your poor father now when it's all in the past" flavor of guilt trip, which I'm sure was effective in manipulating his already desperate nerves, particularly in some of the last months of his life.
    She talked him out of it, and seeing her lack of support, he never gathered the nerve again.
    Imagine telling your obviously dying son to his face not to bring up his bitter, psyche-crushing grievances with his abusive father in possibly his first bid for independence in his miserable life. Now, son, don't bother your father just because you need petty closure.
    His complacent mother snuffed out the one chance he'd ever give himself, not just to confront his father, but to even formally /break/ with him and die as his own man. I imagine in a sense he felt like a child forever.
    He was cheated equally by both of his parents.
    Kafka's tale is as much about outright abuse as it is about the gentler injuries committed by the enablers we love who may also be under their thumbs.
    It's easy to see where the Metamorphosis came from. It would be impossible not to feel doomed and unwanted and out of control, like a giant gross cockroach your loved ones would rather ignore and consign to a shadowed room than acknowledge your plight, growing to adulthood in that kind of environment.
    The whole world is the Trial, and nobody knows what the Hell they did to warrant being detained.

  • @azlanameer4912
    @azlanameer4912 Před 4 lety

    Thank you Sir! Stay blessed!!

  • @izzykaii
    @izzykaii Před 6 měsíci

    Great video 👏 thank you for going indepth

  • @LiteraryRetreat
    @LiteraryRetreat Před 4 lety +3

    I've read the writers you mentioned at the end. Poe, Orwell and Lovecraft but I'm yet to read Kafka. Thanks for this wonderful video which has motivated me to do so. Also, as you mentioned Palestine could you please make a video on Edward Said the intellectual writer of Orientalism?

  • @drzarkov39
    @drzarkov39 Před 4 lety +24

    I love Kafka. I read "The Castle", and loved it. I think everybody should read it. That said, I don't ever want to read anything by Kafka again. That may sound contradictory, but if anyone should read "The Castle", or, I assume, "The Trial", they will understand what I mean.

    • @poeticteen00
      @poeticteen00 Před 4 lety +5

      That's an incredible reaction. Great art should illicit such a strong reaction.

    • @crs7461
      @crs7461 Před 4 lety +6

      The only 2 books I loved but NEVER want to read again are the Castle and 1984

    • @jaimeriveras
      @jaimeriveras Před 4 lety +1

      I read The Trial thirty years after The Metamorphosis. It was barely long enough. Fantastic writer, but his stories and style can do real damage to your head.

    • @tarico4436
      @tarico4436 Před 4 lety +1

      I read both in the same period (that lasted a year or two?). But scratch that: I read all of "The Trial," loved it, of course, then started "The Castle" but only got halfway through. Why, you may ask. Because it was too similar. It felt as though I were reading the same book over again. Nevertheless, highest marks to both (even though I'm not technically qualified to judge "The Castle"). His short stories I treasure even moreso. "Great Wall of China" and "The Starving Artist" come to mind. Haven't read Kafka in, jeez IDK, twenty years? But still one of the all-timers. BTW, If you haven't read "The Plague" by Camus you are truly missing out; the fate of the unpublished wannabe author (minor character) in that tome still blows me away.

    • @poppers7317
      @poppers7317 Před 4 lety +1

      ​@Killary Witch yeah, it was a hell of a year.
      Ghostbusters and Gremlins in the same year? Totally crazy!

  • @JEBEmpires
    @JEBEmpires Před 2 lety +1

    My Trek to Prague in 2019 was full of highlights. Spending one day chasing Kafka landmarks was a fun and fantastic experience.

  • @andreagibbs419
    @andreagibbs419 Před 4 lety

    Brilliant and Beautiful! I will be looking for more. Thank you.