Kafkaesque
From Includipedia, the inclusionist encyclopedia
"Kafkaesque" is an auctorial descriptive which is used to describe concepts, situations, and ideas which are reminiscent of the literary work of Prague writer Franz Kafka, particularly his novel The Trial and his novella The Metamorphosis.
The term, which is quite fluid in definition, has also been described as "marked by a senseless, disorienting, often menacing complexity: Kafkaesque bureaucracies" [1] and "marked by surreal distortion and often a sense of impending danger: Kafkaesque fantasies of the impassive interrogation, the false trial, the confiscated passport ... haunt his innocence" — The New Yorker. [2]
It can also describe an intentional distortion of reality by powerful but anonymous bureaucrats. "Lack of evidence is treated as a pesky inconvenience, to be circumvented by such Kafkaesque means as depositing unproven allegations into sealed files ..." Another definition would be an existentialist state of ever-elusive freedom while existing under unmitigatable control.
The adjective refers to anything suggestive of Kafka, especially his nightmarish type of narration, in which characters lack a clear course of action, the ability to see beyond immediate events, and the possibility of escape. The term's meaning has transcended the literary realm to apply to real-life occurrences and situations that are incomprehensibly complex, bizarre, or illogical.
Cultural references
- On November 30, 2006, a federal judge condemned the bureaucracy at the United States Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as "Kafkaesque" and ordered them to resume benefits to Hurricane Katrina victims.
- In the book Rogue Regime on the subject of North Korea, the author Japser Becker claims that "terms like Orwellian or totalitarian do not do justice to the nature of the regime, only a term like kafkaesque can describe the chicanery and manipulation that is carried out".
See also
- This is one of a series of adjectives based on authors' names, such as Brechtian, Joycean, Orwellian, Lovecraftian, Pinteresque, Sadistic/Sadism, Machiavellian, Cartesian and Draconian.

