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      • A Jewish writer who was born and lived most of his life in Prague, Franz Kafka was one of the most important contributors to European modernist prose. All of his surviving fiction was composed in German, which must be considered his mother tongue, although he was raised in a multicultural environment and had a good command of Czech.
      encyclopedia.yivo.org/article.aspx/Kafka_Franz
  1. Kafka became the object of inquiry and discussion in a correspondence between two German-Jewish intellectuals who are themselves often considered 20th century mystics: Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Franz_KafkaFranz Kafka - Wikipedia

    In 1920, Kafka began an intense relationship with Milena Jesenská, a Czech journalist and writer who was non-Jewish and who was married, but when she met Kafka, her marriage was a "sham". [85] His letters to her were later published as Briefe an Milena . [ 86 ]

  3. In February of the following year, Kafka gave a revelatory lecture in the Jewish Town Hall in Prague in which he raved about the virtues of Yiddish. In the following years, Kafka grew interested in Judaism and Zionism, and even fantasized about moving to Israel.

  4. Aug 18, 2008 · Less well known is the fact that Kafka was a totally engaged Jewish personality and writer with many intimate connections to Zionism and Jews." Gelber noted that the national library in...

  5. Jan 23, 2023 · In February 1913, Kafka similarly wrote to his fiancée Felice Bauer about a visit to an Eastern European Jewish timber merchant whose choreography of hand movements accompanied his “Talmudic...

  6. Kafka grew up as a German-speaking Jew. He was deeply fascinated by the Jews of Eastern Europe, who he thought possessed an intensity of spiritual life that was absent from Jews in the West. His diary is full of references to Yiddish writers. Yet he was at times alienated from Judaism and Jewish life.

  7. 4 days ago · Franz Kafka moved in German Jewish intellectual circles throughout his life. He received a doctorate in law in 1906 from the University of Prague. Afterward he worked for insurance companies, which was time-consuming and left him only late night hours for writing.

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