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The Metropolis and the Attic: Spatial Representations of Jewish Identity in Kafka and the Golem of Prague

  • Erica Smeltzer

Date Published:

9 June, 2016

Abstract:

The paper queries the significance of two figures in representations of Prague, the legendary Golem and the writer Franz Kafka. It analyzes the spatial representation of Jewish identity in iterations of the Golem legend, such as Alois Jirásek’s retelling of the Golem legend in Old Czech Legends (Staré pověsti české, 1894) and Yudl Rosenberg’s treatment of the legend in The Golem and the Wondrous Deeds of the Maharal of Prague (Niflaot Maharal, 1909); and juxtaposes them with the handling of space in Kafka’s “Report to an Academy” (“Ein Bericht für eine Akademie,” 1917) and The Metamorphosis (Die Verwandlung, 1915). Surveying their shifts between modes of metropolitan mobility and sequestration, I suggest that these narratives of straddled identity play around the edges of identity, resonating, in particular, at the times when both Czechs and Jews found themselves caught between the responsibilities of tradition and the pressures of assimilation.

 

June 2016: Erica Smeltzer is a Ph.D. Candidate in Literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz.  Her dissertation project is entitled, Urban Space and National Memory: The Narratives of Prague, Gdańsk and Berlin. It addresses the representation of national history and identity in the physical and literary topography of urban centers. 

 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 04/13/2020