83rd out of 864 books
—
492 voters
The Trial
by
Franz Kafka,
Edwin Muir , Willa Muir
Written in 1914 but not published until 1925, a year after Kafka’s death, The Trial is the terrifying tale of Josef K., a respectable bank officer who is suddenly and inexplicably arrested and must defend himself against a charge about which he can get no information. Whether read as an existential tale, a parable, or a prophecy of the excesses of modern bureaucracy wedded...more
Paperback, 285 pages
Published
March 28th 1995
by Schocken
(first published 1925)
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Kafka is tough.
Kafka doesn’t play and he doesn’t take prisoners.
His "in your grill" message of the cruel, incomprehensibility of life and the powerlessness of the individual is unequivocal, harsh and applied with the callous dispassion of a sadist.
Life sucks and then you die, alone, confused and without ever having the slightest conception of the great big WHY.
Fun huh?
Finishing The Trial I was left bewildered and emotionally distant, like my feelings were stuck looking out into the middle di...more
Kafka doesn’t play and he doesn’t take prisoners.
His "in your grill" message of the cruel, incomprehensibility of life and the powerlessness of the individual is unequivocal, harsh and applied with the callous dispassion of a sadist.
Life sucks and then you die, alone, confused and without ever having the slightest conception of the great big WHY.
Fun huh?
Finishing The Trial I was left bewildered and emotionally distant, like my feelings were stuck looking out into the middle di...more
The tortured bureaucratic world described in The Trial always strikes me as startlingly modern. I wondered
How The Trial might have started if Kafka had been an academic writing in 2010
K's latest conference paper had been rejected, and now he sat in front of his laptop and read through the referees' comments. One of them, evidently not a native speaker of English, had sent a page of well-meaning advice, though K was unsure whether he understood his recommendations. The second referee had only wri...more
How The Trial might have started if Kafka had been an academic writing in 2010
K's latest conference paper had been rejected, and now he sat in front of his laptop and read through the referees' comments. One of them, evidently not a native speaker of English, had sent a page of well-meaning advice, though K was unsure whether he understood his recommendations. The second referee had only wri...more
Has this ever happened to you? You're chugging your way through a book at a decent pace, it's down to the last legs, you've decided on the good ol' four star rating, it's true that it had some really good parts but ultimately you can't say that it was particularly amazing. And all of the sudden the last part slams into your face, you're knocked sprawling on your ass by the weight of the words spiraling around your head in a merry go round of pure literary power, and you swear the book is whisper...more
Before you read my old initial review here's a summary that has been distilled over time in my mind:
Franz Kafka was a true genius. What is this sign of genius? When you can write a classic novel that wasn't even properly completed.
I read The Trial to give myself a better perspective on Kafka's writing style for my literature course. I can perceive similarities to his Metamorphosis but in many aspects this is a completely different work. However they are both challenging pieces with complex idea...more
Franz Kafka was a true genius. What is this sign of genius? When you can write a classic novel that wasn't even properly completed.
I read The Trial to give myself a better perspective on Kafka's writing style for my literature course. I can perceive similarities to his Metamorphosis but in many aspects this is a completely different work. However they are both challenging pieces with complex idea...more
Just the part where K. discusses with the priest the fable (a parable of his situation which has been published separately as a short story; "Before the Law") deserves not 5 but a hundred stars! The same with the end of the book, one of the best I've read. Apart from that I have to admit that I found it a little boring and totally frustrating in many parts. In any Kafka's work I always feel anxious and in a state of bewilderment. He is a master in this and his stories maintain in the reader this...more
Josef K.(just his initial), is a banker in Prague, now the capital of the Czech Republic, during the last days of the Austro- Hungarian Empire, before World War 1.Such a young man at the age of thirty, to be in charge of a large bank's finances.He lives in a boarding house of Frau Grabach. Why such a successful man does, is a mystery.Maybe he likes the women there,especially Fraulein Burstner, Josef is a bit of a wolf.Out of the sky two men come to his room and arrest him. The arrogant guards ev...more
"The Trial" is funny. If you read it as a comedy, it's not only more entertaining, it's far more frightening. Dark Comedy. The moral of the story, to elaborate a cliche', is that it's only futile to resist when you have no idea what you're resisting. We never know what K did wrong, and neither did he, and the whole thing is just an absurd mystery that trips itself up sentence by sentence. There are banana peels strewn all over this book and the slapstick is existential rather than vaudevillian....more
جيدة على مستوى الرسوم واختصار أحداث الرواية الطويلة بشكل غير مُخِلّ صالح لثقافة الكوميكس، وليست الرواية عمومًا لمعجبي الكوميكس من نوعية ما تصدره شركات (دي سي) و(مارفيل) وإنما الأدبيات من نوعية Maus أو The Killing Joke أو Watchmen.
أعجبني خيال الرسامة في رؤيتها لكوابيس (كافكا) الشنيعة بصريًا إلى حدٍ ما، ولو أني كنتُ أطمع في المزيد، ولازلت أرى أن أديب عبقري كهذا يمكن أن يخرج من عوالمه نتاج بصري أبدع وأكثر كابوسية من ذلك.
أعجبني خيال الرسامة في رؤيتها لكوابيس (كافكا) الشنيعة بصريًا إلى حدٍ ما، ولو أني كنتُ أطمع في المزيد، ولازلت أرى أن أديب عبقري كهذا يمكن أن يخرج من عوالمه نتاج بصري أبدع وأكثر كابوسية من ذلك.
My wife and I sued the former owners of our current home because they didn't disclose the removal of a weight-bearing wall or water seepage into the basement. It was a very lengthy, expensive, irritable, disorganized, and unsatisfying experience even though we won.
If you've ever had an experience with the legal system (and here I assume they're all bad experiences), then read The Trial by Franz Kafka. It will reassure you that today's level of frustration with lawyers, the legal administrative...more
If you've ever had an experience with the legal system (and here I assume they're all bad experiences), then read The Trial by Franz Kafka. It will reassure you that today's level of frustration with lawyers, the legal administrative...more
I decided to read The Trial was because I saw that next week’s lecture made reference to this book as well as Orwell’s 1984. These books weren’t required reading but I’ve read 1984 and I thought it would be a good excuse to read The Trial, because I’m pretentious like that. I really enjoyed Kafka’s The Metamorphosis so I was excited to have an excuse to read his famous unfinished novel. The Trial tells the story of Josef; a chief financial officer for a bank finds himself being arrested and pros...more
First, a quick summary of this horrible, horrible novel. Some jackass gets arrested, he does things you would not do, sees people you would not see and has thoughts you would not have. After that, a priest and a parable then, mercifully, the end.
Now my thoughts. K. is a pompous ass with a very important job - to him. The bureaucrats are the best part of the whole story, all job description, no brains (like now!). K's uncle, lawyer and landlady are very forgettable. Fräulein Bürstner is intriguin...more
Now my thoughts. K. is a pompous ass with a very important job - to him. The bureaucrats are the best part of the whole story, all job description, no brains (like now!). K's uncle, lawyer and landlady are very forgettable. Fräulein Bürstner is intriguin...more
Look at Joseph K., a bank officer living in a country with a constitution. He wakes up one day with strange men in his apartment telling him he's under arrest. Why or for what offense, no one knows. The arresting officers themselves don't know and can't tell him. Even if he's under arrest, however, no one picks him up or locks him in jail. He can still go to his office, work, perform his customary daily chores, and do whatever he wants to do as he awaits his trial. But he is understandably anxio...more
Kafka's Trial is one of those books that are always present in cultural sphere and referenced ad nauseum. Despite never having read Kafka before I am quite sure I used the word 'Kafkaesque' on many occasions and maintained a semi-eloquent conversation about 'The Trial'.
I could've probably done without ever reading it but recently I resolved to take my literary pursuits seriously and since books seem to be the only thing in this world I truly care for I might as well take it to another level.
'The...more
I could've probably done without ever reading it but recently I resolved to take my literary pursuits seriously and since books seem to be the only thing in this world I truly care for I might as well take it to another level.
'The...more
ATTENZIONE SPOILER
Un Kafka più involuto e macchinoso rispetto a "La metamorfosi". Lo stile a tratti è pesante, farraginoso, i periodi sono lunghissimi e ghirigorati.
Per quanto riguarda la storyline, mi ha sicuramente affascinato l'amo che Kafka getta al lettore sin dalle prime pagine: non si sa e basta per quale motivo K. venga arrestato. Il surrealismo delle situazioni a seguire - le guardie che dovrebbero controllarlo pensano piuttosto a fargli fuori la colazione e gli vogliono rubare i vestit...more
Un Kafka più involuto e macchinoso rispetto a "La metamorfosi". Lo stile a tratti è pesante, farraginoso, i periodi sono lunghissimi e ghirigorati.
Per quanto riguarda la storyline, mi ha sicuramente affascinato l'amo che Kafka getta al lettore sin dalle prime pagine: non si sa e basta per quale motivo K. venga arrestato. Il surrealismo delle situazioni a seguire - le guardie che dovrebbero controllarlo pensano piuttosto a fargli fuori la colazione e gli vogliono rubare i vestit...more
Joseph K., stimato procuratore di un’importante banca, viene posto in stato di arresto la mattina del suo trentesimo compleanno: nessuno gli notifica il capo d’accusa, anzi gli viene detto che questo tribunale (che non ha nulla a che vedere con i tribunali ordinari) non prevede tale atto, ma solo la condanna o l’assoluzione. L’arresto non comporta nessuna conseguenza sul piano pratico: Joseph K. continua la sua vita ma deve, di tanto in tanto, presentarsi alle udienze fissate dal tribunale.
Quel...more
Quel...more
After reading the first sentence, I distrusted the narrator.
Third-person narrators tell the story but are rarely expected to think; express their own ideas and reasoning capabilities. They possess omniscient and omnipresent characteristics but should have no agency to answer conundrums. The narrator of The Trial immediately considers the possible reasons for K's arrest and informs the reader of his conclusion. This automatically beckons the reader to question whether the narrator is correct in...more
Third-person narrators tell the story but are rarely expected to think; express their own ideas and reasoning capabilities. They possess omniscient and omnipresent characteristics but should have no agency to answer conundrums. The narrator of The Trial immediately considers the possible reasons for K's arrest and informs the reader of his conclusion. This automatically beckons the reader to question whether the narrator is correct in...more
My first impression of this graphic novel version of "The Trial" was positive--but then I went back and re-read Kafka's book.
Certainly the sense of ominousness comes across in Montellier's drawings, but they are too heavy-handed and lack the subtleness of the layers in the original. I felt especially that Joseph K was way too solid and overbearing. The illustrations did not at all convey the way he fades gradually out his his life and into a state of total passive uncertainty. There are also to...more
Certainly the sense of ominousness comes across in Montellier's drawings, but they are too heavy-handed and lack the subtleness of the layers in the original. I felt especially that Joseph K was way too solid and overbearing. The illustrations did not at all convey the way he fades gradually out his his life and into a state of total passive uncertainty. There are also to...more
« Lei è innocente? », chiese. « Sì », disse K. Fu addirittura con gioia che diede risposta a questa domanda, soprattutto perché quella risposta era diretta a un privato, e non comportava quindi nessuna responsabilità. Nessuno gli aveva ancora rivolto una domanda così esplicita. Per assaporare questa gioia, aggiunse: « Sono del tutto innocente ».
Alcuni anni fa, quando ero ancora al liceo, mi capitò di assistere a una rappresentazione teatrale di questo stesso testo. Anche allora – e, direi, sopr...more
Alcuni anni fa, quando ero ancora al liceo, mi capitò di assistere a una rappresentazione teatrale di questo stesso testo. Anche allora – e, direi, sopr...more
What an interesting journey inside Kafka's absurd reverie; the existential tale that is, like great books, highly controversial and can be interpreted on many levels. The Kafkaesque surrealism and absurdity were quite gripping to say the least with their uncommon characters inside a bureaucratic totalitarian state in the modern industrial age. The novel is about the bleak tale of the protagonist, Josef K., who is caught in a labyrinth of incomprehensible circumstances after being prosecuted with...more
Sometimes when book bothers me, I read more by the same auther to develope my sense of the author's style and personality. This book, however, did the opposite, after finishing it I had the same thought, "this is brillian but why does the author write such fantastical situations." I finally "get" this guys genius after I read a quote in a book I am reading now that says, "all good fiction does not necessarily depict reality as much as it uncovers truth." FINALLY, I got it. I get Kafka and can mo...more
really enjoyed. every one talks about Kafka's mazes, the huge and terrifying machine of society, etc, etc,... but what really makes this book happen for me is the humor and the sexually charged episodes (sometimes intertwined...)
things are hopeless, here. but the individual, frivolous and laughable, is still fraught with needs and vanity.
things are hopeless, here. but the individual, frivolous and laughable, is still fraught with needs and vanity.
This was one of Kafka's works that was published posthumously by Kafka's friend despite his request that all of his unpublished writings be burned unread after his death. It is a satiric and symbolic tale of a man who mysteriously finds himself arrested and on trial one day. He can't figure out what exactly he's on trial for, and the mysterious court that is judging him is complex and surreal and unfathomable.
There were some really good things Kafka had going on here, but I just wasn't blown aw...more
There were some really good things Kafka had going on here, but I just wasn't blown aw...more
It is hard for me to trust my own opinion of "The Trial" not only because I didn't think very highly of a classic that seems to have been unanimously declared a work of genius by readers and critics alike, but because this genre is not my forte. I tend to gravitate towards nonfiction, but I read the book for a college Jewish Lit class. Still, here are my thoughts:
This bizarre tale - surreal, illogical, drawn-out and depressing - seems like a long winded effort to depict corruption and individual...more
This bizarre tale - surreal, illogical, drawn-out and depressing - seems like a long winded effort to depict corruption and individual...more
24.10.2012
لقد أسأت فهم الرواية كثيرا و ظلمت الكاتب كما توقعت .. صحيح انني اعتقدت في البداية ان البطل يحلم نظرا لتشابه احداث القصة في عدم ترابط عناصرها وعدم منطقيتها مع الأحلام الا انني لم اتمكن من فك رموزهاا لعدم إلمامي بهذه اللغة , والفضل يعود لكتاب اريك فروم عن الرمزية في الأحلام والأساطير والحكايات في فكه لبعض طلاسم هذه الرواية , أو بالأحرى فك العجينة الموجودة بذهني , هكذا تبدلت نظرتي لرواية كافكا التي كنت قد اعتبرتها تافهة عن جهل مني . و سوف أعيد قراءتها في أقرب فرصة لمحاولة فهمها أكثر وإعطا...more
لقد أسأت فهم الرواية كثيرا و ظلمت الكاتب كما توقعت .. صحيح انني اعتقدت في البداية ان البطل يحلم نظرا لتشابه احداث القصة في عدم ترابط عناصرها وعدم منطقيتها مع الأحلام الا انني لم اتمكن من فك رموزهاا لعدم إلمامي بهذه اللغة , والفضل يعود لكتاب اريك فروم عن الرمزية في الأحلام والأساطير والحكايات في فكه لبعض طلاسم هذه الرواية , أو بالأحرى فك العجينة الموجودة بذهني , هكذا تبدلت نظرتي لرواية كافكا التي كنت قد اعتبرتها تافهة عن جهل مني . و سوف أعيد قراءتها في أقرب فرصة لمحاولة فهمها أكثر وإعطا...more
This is a book that leaves an imprint on the mind. Certain passages (Titorelli, The Priest's parable, the absolutely inexplicable whipping bit, THE ENDING) are hard to get out of your head, at least they were for me. The vivid imagery and vague symbolism that may or may not have deep meaning are a constant subject of my thoughts; hell, this book has worked it's way into my dreams even! No really, I had a dream where me and Titorelli (he looked like the mime from "Children of Paradise") were talk...more
Verdict: A tome of existentialist tripe so bleak and pointless there isn’t even a trial.
There comes a point in the evolution all art; visual, literary, musical, wherein those who create it eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil and become too self aware. ‘Look at this medium,’ they proclaim. ‘We have been following rules, society imposed rules limiting what are work can be, limiting what *we* can be!’ It shines suddenly and clearly before them, conventions that were never questioned are...more
There comes a point in the evolution all art; visual, literary, musical, wherein those who create it eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil and become too self aware. ‘Look at this medium,’ they proclaim. ‘We have been following rules, society imposed rules limiting what are work can be, limiting what *we* can be!’ It shines suddenly and clearly before them, conventions that were never questioned are...more
Kafkaesque, as defined by Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (Tenth Edition) refers to “having a nightmarishly complex, bizarre or illogical quality”. Franz Kafka’s novel, The Trial, is the ultimate Kafkaesque story; the original (written before his death in 1924); the story that gave coinage to the word. As for its contribution on the whole, this novel, for its nightmarish narrative and bizarre plot, is considered a forerunner in existential literature.
On the morning of his thirtieth bi...more
On the morning of his thirtieth bi...more
Apr 13, 2010
Tjellow
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
novels,
personal-classics
My first Kafka. Liked the book. Everything starts out completely normal untill you start figuring out things aren't at all what they seem to be. Although I haven't the clue what some events/occasions are synonymous with I did figure out some... At least I finished the book thinking I did.
Then it struck me that pherhaps the whole Kafka mythos made me look for things behind things while it may well could have been just an ordinary story about a bank employee embrodied in a curious trial.
I read an...more
Then it struck me that pherhaps the whole Kafka mythos made me look for things behind things while it may well could have been just an ordinary story about a bank employee embrodied in a curious trial.
I read an...more
Feb 28, 2008
Daniel
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
anyone interested in bizarre situations of dizzying anxiety
Shelves:
german
This may be the strangest book I have ever read. What can I say - it was Kafkaesque! I never knew what the trial was about, but I always thought it was about, well, a trial. It turns out - and I'm not spoiling it for you, because this is clear in the beginning - that Josef K. doesn't know what the trial is about either.
Sometimes it's hard in German for me to be sure I have the tone right, but much of this book is dream/nightmare-like, not unlike Die Verwandlung. I can't say that I got much out...more
Sometimes it's hard in German for me to be sure I have the tone right, but much of this book is dream/nightmare-like, not unlike Die Verwandlung. I can't say that I got much out...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who's read The Trial? | 65 | 578 | Apr 20, 2013 02:48pm | |
| La Stamberga dei ...: Il processo di Franz Kafka | 7 | 16 | Apr 17, 2013 09:05am | |
| Goodreads Librari...: Información adicional para "El Proceso" de Franz Kafka. | 6 | 37 | Sep 05, 2012 04:20am | |
| Goodreads Librari...: Seperate edition | 4 | 149 | Jan 06, 2012 08:05am | |
| Boxall's 1001 Bo...: June {2011} Discussion -- THE TRIAL by Franz Kafka | 125 | 139 | Jul 10, 2011 07:04pm |
Franz Kafka (German pronunciation: [ˈfʀants ˈkafka]) was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Bohemia (presently the Czech Republic), Austria–Hungary. His unique body of writing—much of which is incomplete and which was mainly published posthumously—is considered to be among the most influential in Western lite...more
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“It's only because of their stupidity that they're able to be so sure of themselves.”
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“From a certain point onward there is no longer any turning back. That is the point that must be reached.”
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