Kafka and Noise: The Discovery of Cinematic Sound in Literary Modernism

Author:   Kata Gellen
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
ISBN:  

9780810138940


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 January 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Kafka and Noise: The Discovery of Cinematic Sound in Literary Modernism


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Overview

A series of disruptive, unnerving sounds haunts the fictional writings of Franz Kafka. These include the painful squeak in Gregor Samsa's voice, the indeterminate whistling of Josefine the singer, the relentless noise in """"The Burrow,"""" and telephonic disturbances in The Castle. In Kafka and Noise, Kata Gellen applies concepts and vocabulary from film theory to Kafka's works in order to account for these unsettling sounds. Rather than try to decode these noises, Gellen explores the complex role they play in Kafka's larger project. Kafka and Noise offers a method for pursuing intermedial research in the humanities—namely, via the productive """"misapplication"""" of theoretical tools, which exposes the contours, conditions, and expressive possibilities of the media in question. This book will be of interest to scholars of modernism, literature, cinema, and sound, as well as to anyone wishing to explore how artistic and technological media shape our experience of the world and the possibilities for representing it.

Full Product Details

Author:   Kata Gellen
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
Imprint:   Northwestern University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.500kg
ISBN:  

9780810138940


ISBN 10:   0810138948
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 January 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Impeccably argued and thoroughly researched, this book offers a series of original and incisive perspectives on Kafka's work in general, the role of sound and noise in Kafka's writing, and the coming of sound to twentieth-century literature. It will clearly add important new scholarship to the field of Kafka research, as well as a masterly contribution to the growing writing on Kafka's and other modernist writers' relationships to cinema and modern media culture. --Lutz Koepnick, author of The Long Take: Art Cinema and the Wondrous


"""For any reader captivated by the curious persistence of strange sounds in Kafka's work, the consequences of Gellen's work simply for understanding Kafka's are exciting in themselves."" --Los Angeles Review of Books ""[Gellen's] study makes a significant contribution to the ways in which film studies may provide critical concepts that supplement literary criticism and sound studies"" --Monatshefte ""Kafka and Noise is an ambitious and exciting addition to the interdisciplinary field of sound studies. Gellen demonstrates exemplary and enlightening close readings of Kafka's stories in relation to his fascination with sounds--no small feat, considering the vast amount of scholarship on Kafka."" --Stefanie Harris, author of Mediating Modernity: German Literature and the ""New"" Media, 1895-1930 ""Given its interdisciplinary character, Kafka and Noise will be of interest to Kafka scholars, modernists, literary critics, film scholars, and those working in sound studies and animal studies. This book is sure to stimulate cross-disciplinary dialogue and inspire a reconsideration of the disruptive, unsettling noises in the diegetic worlds of Kafka's stories."" --Holly Yanacek, German Studies Review ""Impeccably argued and thoroughly researched, this book offers a series of original and incisive perspectives on Kafka's work in general, the role of sound and noise in Kafka's writing, and the coming of sound to twentieth-century literature. It will clearly add important new scholarship to the field of Kafka research, as well as a masterly contribution to the growing writing on Kafka's and other modernist writers' relationships to cinema and modern media culture."" --Lutz Koepnick, author of The Long Take: Art Cinema and the Wondrous"


Impeccably argued and thoroughly researched, this book offers a series of original and incisive perspectives on Kafka's work in general, the role of sound and noise in Kafka's writing, and the coming of sound to twentieth-century literature. It will clearly add important new scholarship to the field of Kafka research, as well as a masterly contribution to the growing writing on Kafka's and other modernist writers' relationships to cinema and modern media culture. --Lutz Koepnick, author of The Long Take: Art Cinema and the Wondrous Kafka and Noise is an ambitious and exciting addition to the interdisciplinary field of sound studies. Gellen demonstrates exemplary and enlightening close readings of Kafka's stories in relation to his fascination with sounds--no small feat, considering the vast amount of scholarship on Kafka. --Stefanie Harris, author of Mediating Modernity: German Literature and the New Media, 1895-1930 Given its interdisciplinary character, Kafka and Noise will be of interest to Kafka scholars, modernists, literary critics, film scholars, and those working in sound studies and animal studies. This book is sure to stimulate cross-disciplinary dialogue and inspire a reconsideration of the disruptive, unsettling noises in the diegetic worlds of Kafka's stories. --Holly Yanacek, German Studies Review For any reader captivated by the curious persistence of strange sounds in Kafka's work, the consequences of Gellen's work simply for understanding Kafka's are exciting in themselves. --Los Angeles Review of Books [Gellen's] study makes a significant contribution to the ways in which film studies may provide critical concepts that supplement literary criticism and sound studies --Monatshefte


Kafka and Noise is an ambitious and exciting addition to the interdisciplinary field of sound studies. Gellen demonstrates exemplary and enlightening close readings of Kafka's stories in relation to his fascination with sounds--no small feat, considering the vast amount of scholarship on Kafka. --Stefanie Harris, author of Mediating Modernity: German Literature and the New Media, 1895-1930 Impeccably argued and thoroughly researched, this book offers a series of original and incisive perspectives on Kafka's work in general, the role of sound and noise in Kafka's writing, and the coming of sound to twentieth-century literature. It will clearly add important new scholarship to the field of Kafka research, as well as a masterly contribution to the growing writing on Kafka's and other modernist writers' relationships to cinema and modern media culture. --Lutz Koepnick, author of The Long Take: Art Cinema and the Wondrous


Kafka and Noise is an ambitious and exciting addition to the interdisciplinary field of sound studies. Gellen demonstrates exemplary and enlightening close readings of Kafka's stories in relation to his fascination with sounds--no small feat, considering the vast amount of scholarship on Kafka. --Stefanie Harris, author of Mediating Modernity: German Literature and the New Media, 1895-1930 For any reader captivated by the curious persistence of strange sounds in Kafka's work, the consequences of Gellen's work simply for understanding Kafka's are exciting in themselves. --Los Angeles Review of Books Impeccably argued and thoroughly researched, this book offers a series of original and incisive perspectives on Kafka's work in general, the role of sound and noise in Kafka's writing, and the coming of sound to twentieth-century literature. It will clearly add important new scholarship to the field of Kafka research, as well as a masterly contribution to the growing writing on Kafka's and other modernist writers' relationships to cinema and modern media culture. --Lutz Koepnick, author of The Long Take: Art Cinema and the Wondrous


Author Information

Kata Gellen is an assistant professor in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literature at Duke University.

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