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This book is good, and it should be understood in the third year of junior high school, mainly depending on your comprehension of the problem.
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It's not that profound, the third year of junior high school is enough.
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A little deep, Kafka's Castle is too philosophical to be recommended to watch in high school.
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Why do you want to ask if you have or you don't understand? It's good to feel a little bit after reading it yourself, and it doesn't have much to do with your grade, the key is to look at the person
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I'm afraid it can't Lovers are not full, friends are supreme Friends are not full, like strangers - the little tail from Stardust.
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Surely, why not. Surely you can, believe me, read it, you can, why not, definitely can.
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I read it in the sixth grade of elementary school = = although I can't say how deep I understand it.
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Kafka's castle I never read in my life. - Leo Tolstoy.
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Why don't you take a look at the deformation meter first! I haven't even read the castle.
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I saw it when I was in my second and third years of junior high school.
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You can think of getting a Beijing hukou.
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Look at it again in a few years and you'll have results.
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If you've had a similar experience, you'll understand.
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Depression Despair of life.
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There are some things that you will understand after experiencing them.
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If you look at it in high school, you can't understand it too much.
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Anyway, I could understand it when I was in my third year of junior high school.
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It's impossible to understand, but it's worth looking at it.
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Reading Kafka, one can find in his words and thoughts the footprints of an era and the living conditions of all classes. Kafka was not a pure writer, at least in my sense he was a philosopher who was always in search of truth and freedom. Faced with the darkness of the society of that period, he fell into irrepressible pain, so he picked up his pen and wrote down criticism and pain from his heart.
However, he was unable to give an ending to his work, and the heavy topic made him unable to continue to finish.
Kafka's "The Castle" is a perfect example of his thinking. A land surveyor tried every means to enter the castle, but he couldn't get in. What does that castle really represent?
Was it the ruler of the hypocritical and cunning capitalism of that period? Maybe yes. A person who has no relationship or background, K has always wanted to enter another world that does not belong to him, but this is impossible, K will never climb into that tightly closed door.
And, most ironically, one of the castle's liaison officers (i.e., a high-ranking ** attendant) told K that the castle's doors were originally opened for K's entry. K, on the other hand, did not enter the castle despite all his might, and only finally got permission to live in the village. Perhaps the castle represents an ideal, an ideal society free from fraud and exploitation.
But in that dark day, it was never possible, it was too slim. Kafka used such seemingly absurd and deranged words to express his strong dissatisfaction with today's society, and used words to complain about the cruelty and indifference of rulers. But Kafka's thinking is negative, he always thinks that there is no way to solve the problems of the present, and he is decadent and evasive about the future.
"The Castle" is actually a tragic work of human beings abandoned and tricked by God. k, is the God's chosen entrant. Since God has declared the right that k can enter, he does not give k the means to enter.
Sometimes, human beings are truly pathetic, God has abandoned us in a desolate place, given us life without giving us the power to control our own destiny, given us an ideal kingdom and yet excluded us.
Kafka used his unique absurd approach to write about the pain and torment of his own soul, as well as the helplessness and cry about the unrealizability of his ideals. Perhaps, he is just a wise man accustomed to edges and corners, with a sharp literary blade cutting at the weak backbone of the ruler, eager to call out the awakening of some people with words. 27:
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Kafka's "Castle" mainly wants to show the psychology of the protagonist K, as well as his fate, which is more like a true portrayal of the author himself, so the description and details of the psychology are relatively detailed and much more, reflecting a feeling of trying to be accepted by the world. Kafka himself had many reasons for this.
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Kafka has many unfinished works, of which The Castle is one of them, as are his other two novels, America and The Trial. Kafka's writing does not seek completeness, he only wants to write the words that cannot be written in his heart. Most of his works have neither titles nor endings.
In his own words, "the bitter whiteness of the paper gouged out my eyes", so he wanted to write, to "write to the depths of the paper". He writes letters, writes diaries, writes **, writes essays.
The Castle was not finished. The protagonist K arrives at a village one night, but is harassed by the villagers at the hotel, because the village belongs to a castle, and K must have permission from the Count of the castle to stay here. K was puzzled at first, and then said that the Count himself had made him a land surveyor.
Early the next morning, he set out for the castle, but the castle was out of reach, and K returned disappointed, only to return to see two assistants assigned to him by the castle. In the days that followed, although he had contact with the castle men such as Crumb, and was praised for his work, he never reached the castle nor saw the count. According to Kafka's friend Blod, the publisher of Kafka's works, Kafka planned to kill K at the end of the day, when news came from the castle that K could live and work there.
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"The Castle" is Kafka's unfinished work, with twenty chapters, and the last chapter of ** Kafka did not write, so there is no ending.
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