Représentations du sacré dans le roman kafkaïen: notes pour une lecture religiologique
Abstract
Without ceasing to constitute an interface to the world and the era to which it belongs, beyond the
stated inability to adhere to it, Franz Kafka's work - The Trial, The Castle, Metamorphosis, The Penal
Colony, and others have built an universe in which the mythic parable abolishes history, closing it between the
pages of such "revealing" books. The poetics of "nostos", common to the great modern reinterpreters of myths,
does not mean with Kafka a re-reading of Hebrew mystical tradition seen as the story of the writer's religious
conceptions. If Kafka's prose may be seen as the end of an anthropological itinerary (in terms of G. Durand)
beginning with Gnostic traditions preserved in Kabbalah, his motivation is to be found in the deepest spiritual
structure of this writer possessed the dream of Don Quixote's "indestructible world" who "was not a religious
writer, but he turned literature into religion".