

Karl seems likely to head off to Oklahoma but the manuscript is incomplete and we never find out whether he gets there. But just when it starts looking interesting, Kafka drifts away. He starts working in a hotel and starts to get caught in a kafkaesque situation. Karl and his uncle fight and Karl has to go off and earn his own living, where he meets two dubious characters – the Irishman, Robinson, and the Frenchman, Delamarche. The house, the environs and, in particular, the people, while not as ominously threatening as they are in the two later novels, are decidedly disquieting. Karl moves to his uncle’s house and, while he is comfortable, he is in an ambiguous situation – ambiguous sexually (implied homoeroticism and Clara, daughter of one of his uncle’s business associates)and also ambiguous because the environment is decidedly surrealistic – kafkaesque, one might say. It was as though there was no longer a stoker. Karl at first defends the stoker but then, when his rich uncle comes to fetch him, he leaves with the uncle. The first chapter, called The Stoker, is about an injustice done to a poor stoker on the ship Karl came over on. This novel is not so depressing as the two later ones but is does start with an injustice. The sixteen-year Karl Rossmann is sent to America because he got a servant girl pregnant.

Originally called Der Verschollene (The Man Who Disappeared), this is Kafka’s first novel. Home » Austria » Franz Kafka » Amerika Franz Kafka: Amerika
