Book presentation Kafka's Last Trial: The Case of a Literary Legacy

Kafka's Last Trial: The Case of a Literary Legacy © W. W. Norton & Company

Tue, 05/21/2019

Gelber Conference Centre

Kafka's Last Trial: The Case of a Literary Legacy

Benjamin Balint, an author and Library Fellow at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem will discuss his book, research and Kafka's legacy.

For more information, please contact the Azrieli Institute of Israel Studies at 514-848-2424 ext: 8721 or azrieli.institute@concordia.ca.
Please RSVP by May 19, 2019
concordia.ca/azrieli

About the book
Kafka’s Last Trial begins with Kafka’s last instruction to his closest friend, Max Brod: to destroy all his remaining papers upon his death. But when the moment arrived in 1924, Brod could not bring himself to burn the unpublished works of the man he considered a literary genius – even a saint. Instead, Brod devoted his life to championing Kafka’s writing, rescuing his legacy from obscurity and physical destruction.
The story of Kafka’s posthumous life is itself Kafkaesque. By the time of Brod’s own death in Tel Aviv in 1968, Kafka’s major works had been published, transforming the once little-known writer into a pillar of literary modernism. Yet Brod left a wealth of still-unpublished papers to his secretary, who sold some, held on to the rest, and then passed the bulk of them on to her daughters, who in turn refused to release them. An international legal battle erupted to determine which country could claim ownership of Kafka’s work: Israel, where Kafka dreamed of living but never entered, or Germany, where Kafka’s three sisters perished in the Holocaust?

“A scrupulous study of the squabble between Germany and Israel over Kafka’s papers, and the two women caught in the middle” by John Banville from The Guardian

Back