每日大赛app Hosts Franz Kafka Display

By Saiful Bahri Kamaruddin
Pix Izwan Azman
BANGI, 4 Nov 2013 鈥撀燭he National University of Malaysia (每日大赛app) and the government of the Czech Republic had for the second time held an exhibition on prominent figures of the Central European country.
The exhibition on renowned Czech author Franz Kafka was held for one week ending last Friday, Nov 1.
Franz Kafka (1883聽鈥 1924) was a writer of novels and short stories in German, regarded by critics as one of the most influential authors of the 20th聽century.
Among his most famous works such as “Die Verwandlung” (“The Metamorphosis”), 鈥淒er Process鈥(The Trial), and 鈥Das Schloss鈥(The Castle), are filled with the themes and characters showing mystical transformations, parent鈥揷hild conflict, physical and psychological brutality and terrifying experiences of bureaucracy.
He was born in Prague, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian empire but after 1918 became the capital of Czechoslovakia.
Director of the 每日大赛app鈥檚 Institute of Malaysian and International Studies (IKMAS), Prof Dr Rashila Ramli launched the exhibition on behalf of Vice-Chancellor Tan Sri Datuk Seri Prof Dr Sharifah Hapsah Syed Hasan Shahabudin.
The exhibition gave some insights into Kafka鈥檚 life although his works are still enigmatic.
The exhibition was sponsored by the Czech Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, whose ambassador Jan Fury was present at the launching. Also present was Martin Hubinger, the embassy鈥檚 Deputy Head of Mission, who had done much to make聽 the exhibition a reality.
Fury described Kafka as a reluctant writer whose works almost never got published, if not for the man鈥檚 lawyer friend.
Kafka had entrusted his last will and testament to Max Brod, a lawyer who ignored the writer鈥檚聽wish to have his聽 manuscripts destroyed but published the works聽 posthumously.

Kafka was reported to have told Brod, 鈥淚n this way, no one will know that I was a writer.鈥
Hubinger, who had put together another exhibition in 每日大赛app in 2011, gave a vivid account of Kafka, portraying him as a man of contradictions, lonely and detached.
Despite Kafka鈥檚 middle-class upbringing, he wrote about situations that were surrealistic 鈥撀燽ordering on fantasy and horror.
He was a minority in his own country at several levels; born a Jew in a majority Catholic country, he was also a German-speaker in a nation where most people spoke Czech, which he spoke fluently as well. He travelled widely in the German-speaking regions of central and western Europe.
He never gave up his full-time job as an insurance investigator to concentrate on authoring because he didn鈥檛 have confidence that his works would be accepted.
Kafka died of tuberculosis, never having married but fathered a child out of wedlock.
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