In search of Heimat: a note on Franz Kafka's concept of law

Banakar, R. 2010. In search of Heimat: a note on Franz Kafka's concept of law. Law and Literature. 22 (3), pp. 463-490. https://doi.org/10.1525/lal.2010.22.3.463

TitleIn search of Heimat: a note on Franz Kafka's concept of law
AuthorsBanakar, R.
Abstract

Are Franz Kafka’s representations of law and legality figments of his imagination, or do they go beyond his obsessive probing of his neurosis to reflect issues that also engaged the social and legal theorists of his time? Does Kafka’s conception of law offer anything new in respect to law, justice, and bureaucracy that was not explored by his contemporaries or by later legal scholars? This paper uses Kafka’s office writings as a starting point for re-examining the images of law, bureaucracy, hierarchy and authority in his fiction - images which are traditionally treated as metaphors for things other than law. The paper will argue that the legal images in Kafka’s fiction are worthy of examination, not only because of their bewildering, enigmatic, bizarre, profane, and alienating effects or because of the deeper theological or existential meanings they suggest, but also as exemplifications of a particular concept of law and legality which operates paradoxically as an integral part of the human condition under modernity. To explore this point, the paper places Kafka’s conception of law in the context of his overall writing, which the paper presents as a series of representations of the modern search for a lost Heimat. Kafka’s writing, the paper argues, takes us beyond the instrumental understanding of law advanced by various schools of legal positivism and allows us to grasp law as a form of experience.

This essay first sketches the contours of the existing debate on Kafka’s literary work. Next, it argues that Kafka’s office writings, his training and daily work as a lawyer, and his career as a bureaucrat have significance for his fiction. The essay then explores the ways in which Kafka’s legal work shaped his ideas about law and legality, focusing on his unfinished novel, The Castle. Like Josef K. in The Trial, the protagonist of The Castle, known only as “K.,” is subjected to an ethical form of judgment that lies beyond the scope and jurisdiction of positive law. This ethical form of judgment, which is ordinarily regarded as the sphere of justice, delivers what in Kafka’s world appears to be an incomprehensible form of injustice. Shifting its focus to The Trial, the paper goes on to show that Kafka’s law is not only dissimilar to positive law, but also defies categorization as religious law, natural law, or customary law. The paper ends by making three interrelated points: First, Kafka’s notion of law takes us beyond a Weberian concern with the rise of bureaucracy and the rationalization of modern society. Second, Kafka’s office writings illustrate that the images of law in his fiction, which critics regard as expressing his “ambivalence about the law,” are based on his experience of working with the law as an insider and an outsider at the same time. This dual perspective allowed Kafka to observe the contradictions intrinsic to the internal and external operations of law. Third, Kafka’s work reveals the role of “non-rational” elements in the formation of modern law and legal institutions. This occurs, however, in the context of Kafka’s numerous representations of the search for Heimat, the peaceful and harmonious community to which the modern individual would like to belong and with which he or she longs to identify.

JournalLaw and Literature
Journal citation22 (3), pp. 463-490
ISSN1535-685X
Year2010
PublisherUniversity of California Press
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1525/lal.2010.22.3.463
Publication dates
Published2010

Related outputs

Driving dangerously: law, culture and driving habits in Iran
Banakar, R. and Nasrolahi Fard, S. 2012. Driving dangerously: law, culture and driving habits in Iran. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 39 (2), pp. 241-257. https://doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2012.711039

The sociology of law: from industrialisation to globalisation
Banakar, R. 2011. The sociology of law: from industrialisation to globalisation. Sociopedia.isa.

Having ones cake and eating it: the paradox of contextualisation in socio-legal research
Banakar, R. 2011. Having ones cake and eating it: the paradox of contextualisation in socio-legal research. International Journal of Law in Context. 7 (4), pp. 487-503. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744552311000267

Pre-empting terrorism? Two case studies of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation
Banakar, R. 2010. Pre-empting terrorism? Two case studies of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation. in: Banakar, R. (ed.) Rights in context: law and justice in late modern society Farnham Ashgate. pp. 193-214

Law, rights and justice in late modern society: a tentative theoretical framework
Banakar, R. 2010. Law, rights and justice in late modern society: a tentative theoretical framework. in: Banakar, R. (ed.) Rights in context: law and justice in late modern society Farnham Ashgate. pp. 19-40

Introduction: snapshots of the rights discourse
Banakar, R. 2010. Introduction: snapshots of the rights discourse. in: Banakar, R. (ed.) Rights in context: law and justice in late modern society Farnham Ashgate. pp. 1-18

Power, culture and method in comparative law: a review essay of Comparative Law: a Handbook, Esin Orucu & David Nelken, eds., Hart Publishing, 2007
Banakar, R., Orucu, E. and Nelken, D. 2009. Power, culture and method in comparative law: a review essay of Comparative Law: a Handbook, Esin Orucu & David Nelken, eds., Hart Publishing, 2007. International Journal of Law in Context. 5 (1), pp. 69-85. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744552309005047

Law through sociology’s looking glass: conflict and competition in sociological studies of law
Banakar, R. 2009. Law through sociology’s looking glass: conflict and competition in sociological studies of law. in: Denis, A. and Kalekin-Fishman, D. (ed.) The ISA handbook in contemporary sociology London Sage. pp. 58-73

The politics of legal cultures
Banakar, R. 2008. The politics of legal cultures. Retfærd: Nordic Journal of Law and Justice. 31 (4), pp. 37-60.

Whose experience is the measure of justice?
Banakar, R. 2008. Whose experience is the measure of justice? Legal Ethics. 10 (2), pp. 209-222.

The politics of legal cultures
Banakar, R. 2008. The politics of legal cultures. Retfærd: The Nordic Journal of Law and Justice. 31 (4/123), pp. 37-60.

Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation
Banakar, R. 2008. Poetic injustice: a case study of the UK's anti-terrorism legislation. Retfærd: The Nordic Journal of Law and Justice. 31 (3/112), pp. 69-90.

Case assignment in English courts
Banakar, R., Flood, J., Webb, J. and Whyte, A. 2007. Case assignment in English courts. in: Langbroek, P.M. and Fabri, M. (ed.) The right judge for each case: a study of case assignment and impartiality in six European judiciaries Antwerp ; Oxford Intersentia.

Sociological jurisprudence
Banakar, R. 2007. Sociological jurisprudence. in: Clark, D.S. (ed.) Encyclopedia of law and society: American and global perspectives Thousand Island, CA Sage.

Review of D. J. Galligan’s Law in Modern Society
Banakar, R. 2007. Review of D. J. Galligan’s Law in Modern Society. Retfaerd. 30 (3/118), pp. 83-89.

Law, race and ethnicity
Banakar, R. 2007. Law, race and ethnicity. in: Clark, D.S. (ed.) Encyclopedia of law and society: American and global perspectives Thousand Island, CA Sage.

Georges Gurvitch
Banakar, R. 2007. Georges Gurvitch. in: Clark, D.S. (ed.) Encyclopedia of law and society: American and global perspectives Thousand Island, CA Sage.

Review: "A life of H.L.A. Hart: the nightmare of the noble dream, by Nicola Lacey
Banakar, R. 2006. Review: "A life of H.L.A. Hart: the nightmare of the noble dream, by Nicola Lacey. Jurist: Nordic Journal of Law and Practice. 113 (2/29).

Integrating reciprocal perspectives: on Georges Gurvitch's theory of immediate jural experience
Banakar, R. 2006. Integrating reciprocal perspectives: on Georges Gurvitch's theory of immediate jural experience. in: Cotterrell, R. (ed.) Law, culture and society: legal ideas in the mirror of social theory Aldershot, UK Ashgate.

Can sociology and jurisprudence learn from each other? A reply to Mauro Zamboni
Banakar, R. 2006. Can sociology and jurisprudence learn from each other? A reply to Mauro Zamboni. Jurist: Nordic Journal of Law and Practice. 113 (2/29).

Book review of 'Race, law, resistance' by Patricia Tuitt (London, The GlassHouse Press, 2004, 134 pp., £25.00)
Banakar, R. 2005. Book review of 'Race, law, resistance' by Patricia Tuitt (London, The GlassHouse Press, 2004, 134 pp., £25.00). Journal of Law and Society. 32 (4), pp. 648-652. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6478.2005.00341.x

Internal case assignment in England
Flood, J., Banakar, R., Webb, J. and Whyte, A. 2005. Internal case assignment in England. in: Fabri, M. and Langbroek, P.M. (ed.) Internal case assignment. A report on a comparative study into the rules and practices of case distribution in courts in five countries Utrecht, Netherlands University of Utrecht. pp. 63-134

Book review of 'The policy of law: a legal theoretical framework' by Mauro Zamboni (Stockholm: Stockholm University Press)
Banakar, R. 2005. Book review of 'The policy of law: a legal theoretical framework' by Mauro Zamboni (Stockholm: Stockholm University Press). Retfaerd. 111 (4/28), pp. 82-87.

When do rights matter? A case study of the right to equal treatment in Sweden
Banakar, R. 2004. When do rights matter? A case study of the right to equal treatment in Sweden. in: Halliday, S. and Schmidt, P. (ed.) Human rights brought home: socio-legal perspectives on human rights in the national context Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 165-184

Studying legal texts: introduction to section three
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Studying legal texts: introduction to section three. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 133-137

Studying legal cultures: introduction to section five
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Studying legal cultures: introduction to section five. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 239-243

Structural approaches: introduction to section four
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Structural approaches: introduction to section four. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 195-201

Socio-legal research in the UK: introduction to section six
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Socio-legal research in the UK: introduction to section six. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 279-282

Law, sociology and method
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Law, sociology and method. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 1-31

Introduction
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Introduction. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. ix-xvi

Ethnography and law: introduction to section two
Banakar, R. and Travers, M. 2003. Ethnography and law: introduction to section two. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 69-74

Studying cases empirically: a sociological method for studying discrimination cases in Sweden
Banakar, R. 2003. Studying cases empirically: a sociological method for studying discrimination cases in Sweden. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) Theory and method in socio-legal research Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 139-159

Merging law and sociology: beyond the dichotomies in socio-legal research
Banakar, R. 2003. Merging law and sociology: beyond the dichotomies in socio-legal research. Berlin, Germany Galda and Wilch.

Sociological jurisprudence
Banakar, R. 2002. Sociological jurisprudence. in: Banakar, R. and Travers, M. (ed.) An introduction to law and social theory Oxford, UK Hart. pp. 33-49

Integrating reciprocal perspectives: on Gurvitch's theory of immediate jural experience
Banakar, R. 2001. Integrating reciprocal perspectives: on Gurvitch's theory of immediate jural experience. Canadian Journal of Law and Society. 16 (1-2), pp. 67-91.

Permalink - https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/item/9048w/in-search-of-heimat-a-note-on-franz-kafka-s-concept-of-law


Share this

Usage statistics

225 total views
0 total downloads
These values cover views and downloads from WestminsterResearch and are for the period from September 2nd 2018, when this repository was created.