Poll

Round 2:

5. The Lottery of Babylon

v.

4. In the Penal Colony

The Lottery of Babylon
 
  8 votes, 72.7%

In the Penal Colony
 
  3 votes, 27.3%


Poll added by: Trevor



Comments Showing 1-17 of 17 (17 new)

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message 1: by Ang (new)

Ang The Lottery of Babylon should win the whole thing.


message 2: by Trevor (new)

Trevor Mod
I’m glad to see Kafka getting some votes here! It looked like that might not happen, though I’d put that as the strength of Borges rather than any kind of weakness for Kafka.


message 3: by Sam (new)

Sam I'm amazed at the vote. I figured I might be the lone vote of dissension and here I am with the majority. I may flip my vote. "In the Penal Colony" is the better story I think, while "The Lottery in Babylon," has more relevance to current thought.


message 4: by Ctb (last edited Mar 15, 2018 09:38AM) (new)

Ctb That narrative style of Lottery, like Cthulhu and Omelas', is tiresome. Why do "big" ideas or concepts have to be so unvaryingly and trudgingly told? No music. No melody or counterpoint. No dance. No rise and fall. No balancing or precipitous edges. No chiarroscurro or color. No, just chthonic clomp, clomp, clomping...


message 5: by David (new)

David The fact that in "The Lottery In Babylon" Borges makes reference to Kafka by name is reason enough that Kafka should win this. Ctb's comparison to "The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas"is a good one, but Borges constructs something more complex and more interesting. He also gives us a character to voice the ideas and not just a narrator. But Kafka gives us a full-blown story. "In The Penal Colony" is a masterful creation. It gets my vote.


message 6: by Ctb (new)

Ctb A Character in Babylon? Describe him. Is he timid? Or egotistical? Suffering from dementia? Kind to animals but not people? Fastidious? What? He's no more than an authorial voice.


message 7: by David (new)

David Ctb wrote: "A Character in Babylon? Describe him. Is he timid? Or egotistical? Suffering from dementia? Kind to animals but not people? Fastidious? What? He's no more than an authorial voice."

Well let's see.... He's missing a finger (the index finger on his right hand). He has a tattoo on his belly. He says he has severed the jugular vein of a bull, so let's go with a "no" on kind to animals. I would say that slashing a bull's throat means he's not timid. He stole food, which is more an indication of understandable desperation than vice. So he is a bit more than just an authorial voice.


message 8: by Ctb (new)

Ctb But those are results of a forced Lottery code, not personality traits.


message 9: by Ctb (new)

Ctb P.S. David, we're on the same team here.


message 10: by Trevor (new)

Trevor Mod
I'm a big fan of "In the Penal Colony" and Kafka. This wasn't an easy one for me, but I did go with "The Library of Babel." It's not a character study, no (and neither is "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas), but it's a fantastic philosophical exploration! And, yes, it's (they both are!) a story!


message 11: by Sam (new)

Sam Trevor wrote: "I'm a big fan of "In the Penal Colony" and Kafka. This wasn't an easy one for me, but I did go with "The Library of Babel." It's not a character study, no (and neither is "The Ones Who Walk Away fr..."

You've mentioned another good and similar Borges story, but I think you meant "The Lottery of Babylon," or I read the wrong story.


message 12: by Trevor (new)

Trevor Mod
Ha, I did just mis-write!


message 13: by David (new)

David Hey, Trevor. You just mis-wrote it again on the match-ups page.


message 14: by Rasu-Ñiti (new)

Rasu-Ñiti Whichever way I vote it feels like a betrayal. It's been so long ago that I can't remember who I read first - Borges or Kafka? Needless to say, I loved them both, but the truth is I certainly remembered more clearly "In the Penal Colony", being that it has a clear narrative structure as opposed to "Babylon's " philosophical bent. It's a coin toss really. As in the previous matchup, tonight I favour brevity. Borges!

David wrote: "The fact that in "The Lottery In Babylon" Borges makes reference to Kafka by name is reason enough that Kafka should win this."
Yes, but he's relegated him to being the name of a latrine (sacred though it may be). What does it mean?


message 15: by Ctb (new)

Ctb It doesn't read like a compliment, but I didn't research Borges's opinions.


message 16: by David (new)

David Ctb, I found this from an article in the journal called Oxford German Studies. I think it's safe to say it's a compliment:

"Borges introduced Kafka’s writing to Argentina, publishing essays about and translating his works starting in the 1930s. He admired Kafka’s stories for being both timely and timeless, and for springing from personal circumstances yet resonating widely. It was for these reasons that Borges felt Kafka’s writing should be part of Argentina’s cultural patrimony. Borges openly borrowed from Kafka for ‘La lotería en Babilonia’ and ‘La biblioteca de Babel’, stories that used Kafkaesque concepts of subordination and infinity. "


message 17: by Ctb (new)

Ctb David wrote: "Ctb, I found this from an article in the journal called Oxford German Studies. I think it's safe to say it's a compliment:

"Borges introduced Kafka’s writing to Argentina, publishing essays about ..."


Thanks, David. That reverses my branch on the logic tree, but I don't know enough about Kafka's work to draw a meritable allusion.

People sanctify, kneel at the filthiest man-made object believing it is a medium to omnipotence and omniscience so as to improve their draws or harm others' - but The Company disavows sanction or guarantees.


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Sam 1091 books
150 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


David 58 books
1 friend
voted for:
In the Penal


Hugh 3330 books
1272 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Cordelia 3607 books
68 friends
voted for:
In the Penal


Rasu-Ñiti 740 books
0 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Estelle 1887 books
14 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Lee 5944 books
107 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Ctb 272 books
1 friend
voted for:
In the Penal


Louise 4428 books
105 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Ang 1365 books
98 friends
voted for:
The Lottery


Trevor 1301 books
295 friends
voted for:
The Lottery