R. Gray "Freud and the
Literary Imagination" Lecture Notes: Franz Kafka, "The Judgment" I. Background 1.
Kafka's self-described mode of literary creation conforms
closely with the notion of a spontaneous creativity, unhampered by rational
constraints, that is propagated by Freud. In a discussion with Rudolf
Steiner, the Austrian founder of anthroposophy (founder of Waldorf
education), which took place in 1911, Kafka described his creative state as
closely related to the trance, or to moments of peculiar clairvoyance. (See
Handout; click here
to view handout.) 2.
In his discussion with Dr. Steiner Kafka lays out what he sees
as the central conflict of his existence: the tension between his workaday
life as a lawyer in a state-run workers compensation insurance agency, and
his calling as a creative writer. Kafka feels torn between competing demands
for his time and energy: his job, his family responsibilities, his need for
concentrated periods of time to devote to his writing. 3.
In a diary entry written the morning after he composed "The
Judgment" (see handout; click here
to view handout), Kafka describes the emergence of this story from his
"unconscious" as a "birth," as an "opening of body
and soul." He valorizes this type of creative spontaneity as the only valid
form of creativity for him, the only process that produces truly great
literature. Kafka would continue throughout his life to see "The
Judgment" as one of his most successful texts. II. Story Line of
"The Judgment" 1) On the surface, if
read as a "realistic" fiction, "The Judgment" has a
relatively simple, but nonetheless seemingly contradictory story line. Georg Bendemann, a young merchant, writes a letter to a
childhood friend in St. Petersburg, announcing his engagement to a wealthy
woman, Frieda Brandenfeld. 2) How can we
comprehend the course of the narrative? Why does Georg follow through on his
father's sentence and accept this condemnation? Is Georg guilty, or is he
falsely accused? III. Ruptures or
turning points in the "plot" or development of the story. Why do
they take us as readers by surprise? Because they take Georg by
surprise, and the narrative works from the outset to locate us inside Georg's
head. We view events from his limited perspective. 1.
First indication that something peculiar is at work: Georg
reports 3 times to his friend about the marriage of an "unimportant
man" to an "unimportant woman": "contrary to his
[Georg's] intentions" the friend shows interest in "this notable
event" (p. 79). Freud would call this a "slip," a "parapraxis," in which Georg
"unconsciously" relates the wish (to boast to the friend about his
successful marriage) that he "consciously" tries to hide. What does
this say about his relationship to this "friend"? 2.
Georg's fiancee, Frieda, makes
assertion that if Georg has friends like the one in Petersburg, he should not
marry at all. (p. 80) What does Freida
mean? Does she imply a homoerotic relationship between Georg and the friend?
Or does she simply believe that if Georg can't be straightforward in his
friendships, he shouldn't be getting married either? 3.
The father questions the existence of Georg's friend and
admonishes his son to be honest, not to deceive him. (p. 82) 4.
Episode about the "Russian Revolution" and friend's
experience of a Priest inciting a mob to violence. (Historical allusion:
"Bloody Sunday" massacre, St. Petersburg, January 1905: Father Georgy Gapon.) (p. 83) This historical rebellion against Czar Nicholas II couched
a demand for better labor conditions behind a pseudo-religious appeal. Note
the relation to the "Sunday" on which this story takes place, and
the proximity of names, Georgy and Georg. Social
revolution (against the political "father") as parallel to Oedipal revolt on the level of the family? 5.
Father's rebellion against Georg's solicitations (p. 84). The
father's "No" in answer to Georg's question about whether he is
"well covered up". The father sees more behind Georg's simple
words. 6.
Father imitates Frieda’s sexual advances and reveals the scar
from his "war wound." (p. 85) What does
this scar mean? Is it the sign that the father has successfully avoided
"castration"? (Note the location of the scar.) Or does it simply
indicate that he is a seasoned warrior, that he has history and the past on
his side in his struggle with Georg? 7.
Father condemns Georg to death and crashes to the bed. (p. 87) IV. But what about the
strange figure of the friend in Petersburg? How can we explain
the existence and role of this character from the perspective of Freudian
theory? 1) Georg and the friend have a "peculiar relationship of
correspondence" (p. 79) = not only their concrete
"correspondence" in exchanged letters, but also a symbolic
"correspondence" as inherently connected figures. V. Correspondence via
Opposition: The
"correspondence between Georg and the friend follows the pattern of
opposition we have already observed in "The Country Doctor."
The father's
accusations against Georg are confirmed. VI. Hypothesis from a
Freudian perspective: (For background, see Freud Reader, 641-42,
on the ambivalent character of the super-ego as introjected
authority (father) figure.) G. is (or feels)
"guilty" of Oedipal revolt; he rebels against his father, takes
advantage of the death of his mother to assert his authority over the father,
wishes his father dead, wants to supplant him, "bury" him
("cover him up") and take over his position of authority in diverse
areas. Georg also imitates the father; he practices a
radical form of mimesis, trying to become "identical" with the father
in stature, authority, social position, economic success, marital status. 1) To pursue this line
of interpretation we must understand the text not as a realistic account of
events in the world, but rather as a psychic text, a projection into fictional
space of Georg's psychological landscape. 2) What evidence
speaks for the father's accusation that Georg is "devilish" to the
extent that he is seeking to supplant his father? a.
Georg has replaced his father in the family business; b.
But Georg acts out a drama of great care and solicitude toward
the father; he treats the father, as it were, as though the father were the
child and Georg the father = role reversal. c.
Georg essentially seeks to supplant the father on various fronts: d.
The German word "Verkehr,"
meaning commerce, intercourse, sexual interaction, communication, social
contact, fuses all these various dimensions into one semantic node; it is the
last word of the text, the "traffic" that covers over the sound of
Georg's fall from the bridge. 3) The father defends himself against Georg's Oedipal revolt; he
summons his last strength so as to defeat his own son, whom he now sees as
his main rival in business, at home, in society, and in sexual matters. 4) Freudian theory can also explain why Georg accepts the
father's condemnation and carries out the sentence: Georg has introjected the authority of the father in
the form of his own authoritarian and disciplinary super-ego.
This is what Freud sees as the result of the Oedipus conflict. Kafka's story
portrays the negative consequences, as it were, of this so-called
"positive" resolution of the Oedipal complex. 5) Friend in Petersburg in "negative" Oedipal relation: VI. Interpretive
Conclusions: 1. Kafka's text thus
presents us with an either/or situation in which neither alternative is
satisfactory; one leads to guilt and death (Georg), the other to celibacy (or
worse?), isolation, social marginalization, "feminization." 2. The story thereby
plays out the ambivalence Freud attaches, via his thesis of basic human
bisexuality, to the Oedipus Complex and the conflicted feelings toward the
father that result from it. VII. Implications of
this interpretative frame for the narrative structure of Kafka's story. 1.
Unlike the interior monologue of "Gustl"
and the first-person narrative structure of "Country Doctor,"
"The Judgment" is told in the third person. It presents a third
basic possibility of narrative approach for the depiction of
Freudian psycho-texts. 2.
"Judgment" is structured around the technique of
"narrated monologue" = the relating of the subjective thoughts of
the protagonist in the diction of a third-person narrator. 3.
We as readers are presented outwardly with Georg's
consciousness, his self-justifications, but we also witness, if we dig
deeper, how Georg withholds information from himself, from his father, and
from his friend. Georg's letters to his friend as prototype of his psychic
constitution = he alludes to events, but refrains from being wholly honest,
and we arrive at his true meaning only by reading against his intentions. See
pp. 78 & 79. 4.
Georg is deceitful, as is the text (the story) that reflects his
conflicted psyche; thus the father's admonition that Georg "tell the
whole truth" (p. 82) is justified. 5.
The text is constituted as a reflection of this ambivalence, as
a semantic complex that reveals 2 vastly different intentional or
psychological planes, the "manifest" and the "latent"
content, to use Freud's terminology. These are joined together--coherent with
Freudian theory--by certain words ("intercourse,"
"success," "Verkehr," etc.) or
peculiarly contradictory statements voiced by the protagonist. These nodal
points expose the "true" meaning that underlies Georg's pleasant,
solicitous facade. These nodal points function much in the manner of
"Freudian slips"; they are parapraxes of
speech or thought (on the level of the character or protagonist) transferred
to the text itself. We as interpreters must "analyze" and explain
these parapraxes as "symptoms" of the
genuine feelings of Georg Bendemann. Last Updated: 10/23/13 |