Kafka, Borges, and the creation of consciousness, Part I: Kafka--dark ironies of the "gift" of consciousness
Language: 
English
Short Title: 
Kafka, Borges, and the creation of consciousness, Part I
Abstract: 

The ways in which Franz Kafka and Jorge Luis Borges struggled with the creation of consciousness in their lives and in their literary works are explored in this two-part essay. In Part I, the author juxtaposes a biographical sketch of Kafka with a close reading of his story "A Hunger Artist" (1924), in which a character (whose personality holds much in common with that of Kafka) spends his life in a quasi-delusional state starving himself in public performances. The hunger artist's self-awareness (of having lived a life devoid of the experience of love and mutual recognition) is achieved in the context of an interpersonal experience in which he has, in fact, found/created "the food [he] liked," that is, an experience of loving and being loved, of seeing and being seen, of being aware of and alive to his own imminent death. This fragile, paradoxical state of consciousness is sustained for only a moment before it is attacked, but not entirely destroyed.

Author(s): 
Ogden, Thomas H.
Item Type: 
Journal Article
Publication Title: 
The Psychoanalytic Quarterly
Journal Abbreviation: 
Psychoanal Q
Publication Date: 
2009-04
Publication Year: 
2009
Pages: 
343-367
Volume: 
78
Issue: 
2
ISSN: 
0033-2828
Library Catalog: 
PubMed
Extra: 
PMID: 19507444

Turabian/Chicago Citation

Thomas H. Ogden. 2009-04. "Kafka, Borges, and the creation of consciousness, Part I: Kafka--dark ironies of the "gift" of consciousness." The Psychoanalytic Quarterly 78: 2: 343-367.

Wikipedia Citation

<ref> {{Cite journal | doi = | issn = 0033-2828 | volume = 78 | pages = 343-367 | last = Ogden | first = Thomas H. | coauthors = | title = Kafka, Borges, and the creation of consciousness, Part I: Kafka--dark ironies of the "gift" of consciousness | journal = The Psychoanalytic Quarterly | date = 2009-04 | pmid = | pmc = }} </ref>