Difference between revisions of "Franz Kafka"
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He is the namesake of [[Café Kafka]] in [[Springfield]].<ref>"[[Little Girl in the Big Ten]]"</ref> | He is the namesake of [[Café Kafka]] in [[Springfield]].<ref>"[[Little Girl in the Big Ten]]"</ref> | ||
− | [[Lisa]] loudly accuses [[Judge Snyder]] | + | [[Lisa]] loudly accuses [[Judge Snyder]] of being Kafkaesque in his ruling.<ref>"[[Orange Is the New Yellow]]"</ref> |
== Non-canon == | == Non-canon == |
Revision as of 02:29, February 2, 2024
It has been requested that this article be moved to Franz Kafka. Please discuss this on the talk page. |
Franz Kafka
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Character Information
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Franz Kafka was a German-language surrealist writer from Prague.
Due to vividly expressed anxiety, alienation, and powerlessness of the individual in his short stories, the term Kafkaesque is used to a description of both an illogical and nightmarishly complexity although Kafkaesque is criticized for being overused.[1]
History
He is the namesake of Café Kafka in Springfield.[2]
Lisa loudly accuses Judge Snyder of being Kafkaesque in his ruling.[3]
Non-canon
The contents of this article are based on an issue of Simpsons Comics or another comic series and is considered to be non-canon and may not have actually happened/existed.
The reason behind this decision is: . |
Sideshow Mel reads Kafka's works after he was fired.[4]
Appearances
- Episode – "Little Girl in the Big Ten" (Café Kafka)
- Episode – "Orange Is the New Yellow" (menioned)
- Comic story – Metamorph Simpsons (referenced)
- Comic story – All Fired Up (book cover)
- Book – The Lisa Book (Kafka for Kids)
References
External links