mconnealy
Well-known
CP93
Established
Would like to see this in B&W. More Kafka, maybe?
Yokosuka Mike
Abstract Clarity
Yokosuka Mike
Abstract Clarity
ddutchison2
Well-known
dab
Electromagnetic waves sensor
Freakscene
Obscure member
Freakscene
Obscure member
If this just turns into photos of creepy as dolls I’m going to have to abandon my own thread.
Glenn2
Well-known
Freakscene
Obscure member
That's a drastic step to take Marty.... I never was much of a Kafka fan but perhaps this photo is a step in the right direction away from dolls. ;-)
Being a Herman Hesse fan this might also be more from Journey to the East.
M4, 21mm Super Angulon , Tri-X , D76 Jantar Mantar Observatory Delhi
View attachment 4848967
This is great.
I really hate dolls.
dourbalistar
Buy more film
Pretty much a Kafkaesque turn, though, a truly grotesque metamorphosis.If this just turns into photos of creepy as dolls I’m going to have to abandon my own thread.
boojum
Ignoble Miscreant
If this just turns into photos of creepy as dolls I’m going to have to abandon my own thread.
Time for clown pics
Freakscene
Obscure member
Pretty much a Kafkaesque turn, though, a truly grotesque metamorphosis.
Touche.
At least I won’t mistake this for the kind of throat complaint that is “the occupational malady of travellers”. Kafka was a lot funnier than people give him credit for.
boojum
Ignoble Miscreant
Touche.
At least I won’t mistake this for the kind of throat complaint that is “the occupational malady of travellers”. Kafka was a lot funnier than people give him credit for.
I told you I read he read The Trial to his friends while he was writing it and they howled with laughter. Maybe we do not understand Kafka completely. Very possible. That said, the sinister side is fascinating.
Bring on the clown. ;o)
CP93
Established
I’m not freaked by clowns, I just find them clichéd and boring.
YMMV, natch.
YMMV, natch.
Harry the K
Well-known
Maybe his friends had the same weird sense of humor, not completely understandable.I told you I read he read The Trial to his friends while he was writing it and they howled with laughter. Maybe we do not understand Kafka completely. Very possible. That said, the sinister side is fascinating.
Bring on the clown. ;o)
Last week I reread "The Castle" after 45 years and was disappointed. Amazing how my perception has changed over the decades.
Worst of all Kafka´s language: No poetic quality whatsoever, no flow, but instead the clumsy and overly complicated diction of a clerk working for an insurance company.
The story is boring and tough as old boots.
Murakami comes to mind as a modern writer kafkaesque who is so much more enjoyable to read.
Kafka wanted his manuscripts to be destroyed after his death...
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Freakscene
Obscure member
There is so much academic literature in Kafka I am sure we know as much about him as we ever will. But you will never understand his works completely. That’s the point: it is very easy to suddenly get a sense of inhabiting a world in which one’s customary habits of thought and behaviour are confounded and made hopeless.I told you I read he read The Trial to his friends while he was writing it and they howled with laughter. Maybe we do not understand Kafka completely. Very possible. That said, the sinister side is fascinating.
Bring on the clown. ;o)
p.giannakis
Pan Giannakis
Freakscene
Obscure member
Someone made a false accusation . . .
Harry the K
Well-known
That´s precisely the feeling I get when I open one of the owner manuals of my digital cameras.it is very easy to suddenly get a sense of inhabiting a world in which one’s customary habits of thought and behaviour are confounded and made hopeless.
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