This section contains 1,095 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |
Kafka appraises this development appropriately when he states: "I can only see decline everywhere ... I do not mean that earlier generations were essentially better than ours, but only younger; that was their great advantage, their memory was not so overburdened as ours today." We may not relegate this apercu to the realm of a bon mot or chance remark. The artist quite aptly points his finger at a contemporary malaise, namely our "overburdened memory." The pathological symptoms concomitant with exaggerated stress on man's intellectual faculty could not but be seen as a danger signal by Kafka's sensitive psyche. It is for this reason that he warned: "they [our fathers] did not know what we can guess at contemplating the course of history: that change begins in the soul before it appears in ordinary existence." Psychologically speaking, Kafka hints here at the phenomenon of dissociation with reference to...
This section contains 1,095 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |