Kafka's Prayer
Author | Paul Goodman |
---|---|
Published | 1947 (Vanguard Press) |
Pages | 265 |
Kafka's Prayer is a 1947 book-length analysis of Franz Kafka and his works by Paul Goodman. Joshua Bloch, in Jewish Criterion, wrote that Goodman "brilliantly analyzed" the "subtleties of anxiety, supplication, pain, and pride" in Kafka's writing.[1]
Notes
- ↑ Bloch, Joshua (October 1, 1948). "Kaleidoscope of Jewish Personality". Jewish Criterion. p. 187. doi:10.1184/pmc/CRI/CRI_1948_112_023_10011948 (inactive 2016-07-19). Retrieved July 9, 2015 – via Carnegie Mellon University Digital Collections.
References
- Barnard, Roger (February 1, 1973). "Goodman Observed". New Society. 23 (539). pp. 251–252. ISSN 0028-6729 – via ProQuest.
- Bower, Anthony (August 24, 1947). "Kafka: 'Writing Is a Form of Prayer'". New York Times. p. BR7. ISSN 0362-4331 – via ProQuest.
- Flores, Angel (August 10, 1947). "'Light on the Hideous': The Strange Powerful Genius of Franz Kafka Explained by His Own Psychology". New York Herald Tribune. p. E4 – via ProQuest.
- Gardner, Martin (1948). "Reviews of The Kafka Problem and Kafka's Prayer". Ethics. 58 (2): 144–146. ISSN 0014-1704. JSTOR 2378835.
- Rahv, Philip (August 2, 1947). "Rev. of Kafka's Prayer". Saturday Review of Literature. 30: 15. ISSN 0147-5932.
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