Franz Kafka: Amerika. Roman
Lesefreundlicher Großdruck in 16-pt-Schrift
Edition Holzinger. Großformat, 216 x 279 mm
Berliner Ausgabe, 2015
Vollständiger, durchgesehener Neusatz mit einer Biographie des Autors bearbeitet und eingerichtet von Michael Holzinger
- Entstanden zwischen 1911 u. 1914: München 1927. Der Titel stammt von Max Brod. Kafka selbst nannte das Fragment »Der Verschollene«. Das erste Kapitel, »Der Heizer«, erschien als selbständige Erzählung: Leipzig (Kurt Wolff) 1913.
Textgrundlage ist die Ausgabe:
- Franz Kafka: Gesammelte Werke. Herausgegeben von Max Brod, Band 1–9, Frankfurt a.M.: S. Fischer, 1950 ff.
Herausgeber der Reihe: Michael Holzinger
Reihengestaltung: Viktor Harvion
Umschlaggestaltung unter Verwendung des Bildes: Franz Kafka (Fotografie aus dem Atelier Jacobi, 1906)
Gesetzt aus Minion Pro, 16 pt.
Franz Kafka was born to Jewish parents in Bohemia in 1883. Kafka s father was a luxury goods retailer who worked long hours and as a result never became close with his son. Kafka s relationship with his father greatly influenced his later writing and directly informed his Brief an den Vater (Letter to His Father). Kafka had a thorough education and was fluent in both German and Czech. As a young man, he was hired to work at an insurance company where he was quickly promoted despite his desire to devote his time to writing rather than insurance. Over the course of his life, Kafka wrote a great number of stories, letters, and essays, but burned the majority of his work before his death and requested that his friend Max Brod burn the rest. Brod, however, did not fulfill this request and published many of the works in the years following Kafka s death of tuberculosis in 1924. Thus, most of Kafka s works were published posthumously, and he did not live to see them recognized as some of the most important examples of literature of the twentieth century. Kafka s works are considered among the most significant pieces of existentialist writing, and he is remembered for his poignant depictions of internal conflicts with alienation and oppression. Some of Kafka s most famous works include The Metamorphosis, The Trial and The Castle.