•  1710
    Kafka's Jewish Languages: The Hidden Openness of Tradition
    Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 15 (2): 65-132. 2007.
    This essay connects Kafka's German and his Jewish linguistic sources, and explores the trans-national perspective on literary tradition they helped him create. I begin with a critique of Deleuze and Guattari's view of Kafka as a minority writer, showing how their cold war nationalism scants the positive contributions that Yiddish and Hebrew made to his work. I continue with an examination of the "twilight of containment," when this postcontemporary Kafka began to break through his cold war canon…Read more