THE UNCANNY HOMES AND HOMELESSNESS IN KAFKA’S “A COUNTRY DOCTOR”
Abstract
This article focuses on the topos “house” which acts as a metaphor for “being” in Kafka’s short story “A Country Doctor.” We handle the notion of the house both literally (spatially) and metaphorically (as one’s being), demonstrating the ways in which the story constructs the house on the contentious relationship between individual privacy and public revelation. While the patient’s house is a playground for societal pressures that demand public exposure, the doctor's house is controlled by sexual forces that demand secrecy, preventing him from taking full ownership of the house or his own being. Both houses are representations of the doctor’s homelessness. There is indeed no house in Kafka’s claustrophobic literary world where one can fully feel at home, i.e. in peace with his own private being and in comfort with others.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
-
Journal Section
Research Article
Publication Date
October 22, 2019
Submission Date
April 17, 2019
Acceptance Date
August 5, 2019
Published in Issue
Year 2019 Volume: 6 Number: 2