Recovering Franz Kafka's asbestos factory
Rose, A
Date: 4 June 2022
Journal
New Literary History
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article recalls Franz Kafka’s part ownership of the asbestos factory, Prague Asbestwerke
Hermann & Co. to introduce two forms of literary recovery, exemplified by Alan Bennett’s
1985 television play, The Insurance Man, and James Kelman’s 1994 novel, How late it was,
how late. Both works develop divergent politicized styles, ...
This article recalls Franz Kafka’s part ownership of the asbestos factory, Prague Asbestwerke
Hermann & Co. to introduce two forms of literary recovery, exemplified by Alan Bennett’s
1985 television play, The Insurance Man, and James Kelman’s 1994 novel, How late it was,
how late. Both works develop divergent politicized styles, based on their respective readings
of Kafka’s life and work. Rather than simply recuperating Kafka from this biographeme or
damning him for it, they find the aesthetic means to represent the asbestos problem in the
combination of Kafka’s biography and writing, either by addressing the long tail of asbestos
exposure or by focussing on the interiority of asbestos victims. Brought together, these
approaches turn the recovery of Kafka’s asbestos factory into a case for thinking about
precarity, activism, compensation and justice.
History
Collections of Former Colleges
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