Franz Kafka was the son of Hermann and Julie Kafka, the eldest of six siblings in his middle-class Ashkenazi Jewish family. He had a relatively isolated upbringing as his parents worked long hours away from home, often leaving the young Kafka in the care of governesses and servants. His family was frequently in tragic circumstances: two of Kafka’s brothers died in infancy (and his three sisters were to perish in the Holocaust many years later). Kafka’s father had little time for his son’s creativity, and Kafka felt his mother was too devoted to domestic life to understand his dreams of becoming a writer. Kafka did not live on his own until the age of 31. After a solid early education, Kafka went to university to study law, where he found a kindred spirit in his friend Max Brod, who shared and encouraged Kafka’s interest in literature. After graduation, Kafka took employment in the insurance industry, working on his writing during the evenings. Though wracked by self-doubt, Kafka was well-liked by his peers and was twice engaged to marry his girlfriend, Felice Bauer, though they eventually separated in 1917. From a young age Kafka was frequently ill, suffering from migraines, anxiety and insomnia. Kafka contracted laryngeal tuberculosis in 1917 and spent much of his later years in sanatoriums in an attempt to improve his health. He lived in Berlin for a while, under the care of his new girlfriend Dora Dymant, before returning to Prague. In 1924, having traveled to a sanatorium in Vienna, Kafka died, likely from starvation brought about by the extreme throat pain caused by his illness. He had published very little at the time of his death. In fact, it is only because of Max Brod, who disobeyed Kafka’s request to burn his unpublished manuscripts, that some of Kafka’s best-known work survives (including the renowned novels
The Castle and
The Trial). Kafka’s reputation quickly rose after his death, as his work’s themes of isolation, paranoia, and bureaucracy grew increasingly pertinent to a Europe dealing with the fall-out of world war and the tensions in countries living under Communist rule. He is now considered one of the foremost writers of the 20th century, and such is his influence that “Kafkaesque” has entered the general lexicon of the English language.