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Agamben's Joyful Kafka: Finding Freedom Beyond Subordination

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Agamben's Joyful Kafka: Finding Freedom Beyond Subordination

Contributors:

By (Author) Anke Snoek

ISBN:

9781441104892

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic USA

Publication Date:

6th December 2012

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

833.912

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

160

Dimensions:

Width 138mm, Height 216mm

Weight:

381g

Description

Both Giorgio Agamben and Franz Kafka are best known for their gloomy political worldview. A cautious study of Agamben's references on Kafka, however, reveals another dimension right at the intersection of their works: a complex and unorthodox theory of freedom. The inspiration emerges from Agamben's claims that 'it is a very poor reading of Kafka's works that sees in them only a summation of the anguish of a guilty man before the inscrutable power'. Virtually all of Kafka's stories leave us puzzled about what really happened. Was Josef K., who is butchered like a dog, defeated And what about the meaningless but in his own way complete creature Odradek Agamben's work sheds new light on these questions and arrives, through Kafka, at different strategies for freedom at the point where this freedom is most blatantly violated.

Reviews

Agambens Joyful Kafka is valuable both as a work of Agamben scholarship and as a work of Kafka criticism: understanding just how Agamben understands Kafka is extremely useful for finding and opening the joy in Kafkas work, and indispensable for coming to grips with the misunderstandings that have marked Agambens. [] Snoeks erudite study makes an important contribution to Agambenian philosophy. It also provides a unique and compelling literary and philosophical study of those moments of reversal which, to quote Benjamin slightly out of context, . . . can make the incomplete (happiness) complete, and the complete (pain) incomplete. * German Studies Review *
One of the greatest questions surrounding Giorgio Agambens work today is how one might embody his complex conceptualizations of our social and cultural realities. Snoeks answer is quite simple: Kafkas perfectly blended surreal and yet all-too-human literary universe delivers us the most profound and pronounced insights into the highly theoretical work of Agamben. Moreover, as she ably demonstrates, this affinity between Kafka and Agamben is not a coincidence, but a combination of those particular elements central to understanding both authors visions of our world. Snoeks in-depth analysis probes the darkest corners of modern life alongside two authors whose commentary on such matters almost singularly defines it. * Colby Dickinson, Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology, Loyola University Chicago, USA *
A richly rewardingand much neededstudy of the influence of Kafka in Agambens work that casts new light on the provocative account of political freedom that he develops. * Catherine Mills, School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia *
Anke Snoeks book fills an existing lacuna in biopolitical theory. Very little in the past generation came close to the explosion of intellectual power that emanated from Benjamins reading of Kafka, or in ours, to the way Giogrio Agamben reads both. Snoeks comprehensive analysis of these intersections supplies a careful map of both moments for students of the present, and theory of potentialities. * Nitzan Lebovic, The Apter Chair of Holocaust Studies and Ethical Values, Lehigh University, USA *

Author Bio

Anke Snoek is Research Fellow in the Faculty of Arts, Macquarie University, Australia.

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