![]() ![]() Thus a total view must inevitably remain inaccessible to him. This, in turn, is the result of Kafka's view which he shares with many twentieth-century writers - that his own self is a parcel of perennially interacting forces lacking a stable core if he should attain an approximation of objectivity, this can come about only by describing the world in symbolic language and from a number of different vantage points. ![]() ![]() The reason for this is that the stories offer a wide variety of possible meanings without confirming any particular one of them. If their endings, or lack of endings, seem to make sense at all, they will do so immediately and not in unequivocal language. Kafka's stories suggest meanings which are accessible only after several readings. ![]()
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