A Hunger Artist is a short story by Franz Kafka. The protagonist, a hunger artist who experiences the decline in appreciation of his craft, is an archetypical creation of Kafka: an individual marginalized and victimized by society at large. The title of the story has been translated also to "A Fasting Artist" and "A Starvation Artist". A Hunger Artist explores the familiar Kafka themes of death, art, isolation, asceticism, spiritual poverty, futility, personal failure and the corruption of human relationships. There is a sharp division among critical interpretations of "A Hunger Artist". Most commentators concur that the story is an allegory, but they disagree as to what is represented. Some critics, pointing to the hunger artist's asceticism, regard him as a saintly or even Christ-like figure. In support of this view they emphasize the unworldliness of the protagonist, the priest-like quality of the watchers, and the traditional religious significance of the forty-day period. Other critics insist that A Hunger Artist is an allegory of the misunderstood artist, whose vision of transcendence and artistic excellence is rejected or ignored by the public. This interpretation is sometimes joined with a reading of the story as autobiographical. According to this view, this story, written near the end of Kafka's life, links the hunger artist with the author as an alienated artist who is dying. The moral of the story, says literature critic Maud Ellmann, is that it is not by food that we survive but by the gaze of others and "it is impossible to live by hunger unless we can be seen or represent doing so".
A Hunger Artist
Start din 14-dagers gratis prøveperiode
- Full tilgang til hundretusener av lydbøker og e-bøker i vårt bibliotek
- Opprett opptil 4 profiler – inkludert barneprofiler
- Les og lytt offline
- Abonnement fra 149 kr per måned

A Hunger Artist
A Hunger Artist is a short story by Franz Kafka. The protagonist, a hunger artist who experiences the decline in appreciation of his craft, is an archetypical creation of Kafka: an individual marginalized and victimized by society at large. The title of the story has been translated also to "A Fasting Artist" and "A Starvation Artist". A Hunger Artist explores the familiar Kafka themes of death, art, isolation, asceticism, spiritual poverty, futility, personal failure and the corruption of human relationships. There is a sharp division among critical interpretations of "A Hunger Artist". Most commentators concur that the story is an allegory, but they disagree as to what is represented. Some critics, pointing to the hunger artist's asceticism, regard him as a saintly or even Christ-like figure. In support of this view they emphasize the unworldliness of the protagonist, the priest-like quality of the watchers, and the traditional religious significance of the forty-day period. Other critics insist that A Hunger Artist is an allegory of the misunderstood artist, whose vision of transcendence and artistic excellence is rejected or ignored by the public. This interpretation is sometimes joined with a reading of the story as autobiographical. According to this view, this story, written near the end of Kafka's life, links the hunger artist with the author as an alienated artist who is dying. The moral of the story, says literature critic Maud Ellmann, is that it is not by food that we survive but by the gaze of others and "it is impossible to live by hunger unless we can be seen or represent doing so".
Metamorphosis - Audiobook
Franz Kafka, Classic Audiobooks
audiobookProsessen
Franz Kafka
audiobook50 Short Story Masterpieces you have to listen before you die (Golden Deer Classics)
F. Scott Fitzgerald, O.Henry, Mark Twain, Kahlil Gibran, W. W. Jacobs, Anonymous, Thomas Jefferson, Founding Fathers, Plato, Lord Alfred Tennyson, T. S. Eliot, William Dean Howells, Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Leo Tolstoy, Washington Irving, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Bram Stoker, Sun Tzu, Edgar Allan Poe, Lao Tzu, Oscar Wilde, William Blake, Patrick Henry, H.G. Wells, Saki, Herman Melville, Clement Clarke Moore, Bret Harte, Immanuel Kant, Jack London, Henry Ford, G.K. Chesterton, Charles Perrault, Anton Chekhov, D. H. Lawrence, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Franz Kafka, James Joyce, John Muir
audiobookProsessen
Franz Kafka
audiobookForvandlingen
Franz Kafka
audiobookThe Trial
Franz Kafka
audiobookbookThe Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka
audiobookbookThe Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka
audiobookbookExistentialism: Philosophical and Literary Works : Notes from Underground. Fear and Trembling. Ecce Homo. The Metamorphosis and others
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Soren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Rainer Maria Rilke, Franz Kafka
audiobookThe Hunter Gracchus
Franz Kafka
audiobookA Report for an Academy
Franz Kafka
audiobookJosephine the Songstress
Franz Kafka
audiobook
Awakened
Laura Elliott
audiobookSlashed Beauties : A spellbinding historical fantasy about sisterhood, betrayal and reclamation
A. Rushby
bookSunward : A Novel
William Alexander
audiobookbookMashi, and Other Stories
Rabindranath Tagore
bookCranford & The Cage at Cranford
Elizabeth Gaskell
audiobookbookMona at Sea
Elizabeth Gonzalez James
audiobookThe Сlassic Collection of Nathaniel Hawthorne. Novels and stories : The Scarlet Letter. The Ambitious Guest. Roger Malvin's Burial. The Christmas Banquet
Nathaniel Hawthorne
audiobookScorched Earth
Tiana Clark
audiobook30 MYSTERY & INVESTIGATION MASTERPIECES #1 (Cronos Classics)
Ry?nosuke Akutagawa, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Wilkie Collins, Arthur Conan Doyle, Hanns Heinz Ewers, Hollis Godfrey, Thomas Hardy, William Le Queux, Maurice Leblanc, Gaston Leroux, Catherine Louisa Pirkis, Edgar Allan Poe, Frank R. Stockton, Mark Twain, Jules Verne, Carolyn Wells, Fred Merrick White, Cronos Classics
bookMetallic Realms : A Novel
Lincoln Michel
audiobookbookThen the Fish Swallowed Him: A Novel
Amir Ahmadi Arian
audiobookThe Burial of the Rats
Bram Stoker
audiobookbook