i assume a contian like you just thinks that we should not be reading this book. Nobody should be like endlessly interpreting i and beig inspired by it. It's more like the loyal person, the person with honor, who has bonds and commitments that that death cannot tear apart. This is ayavo. That is probably the thing he's most well known for, vranz kovka. And it has brought, and just publishing all of thi stuff that he didn't publish, has brought koska a level of honor and fame that certainly nobody would even know who he is, right? Right? Well, i mean, depending is dependetly what the after
David and Tamler wander through the bewildering dream-like world of Franz Kafka’s "The Trial." In part one of a two-part discussion we discuss the circumstances of its publication, the various interpretative approaches that can be taken to the novel, and all the ways that Kafka’s prose gets under your skin, making you feel what’s happening even if you don’t fully understand it. Recorded in the decidedly un-Kafka-esque location of Nosara, Costa Rica – thanks to the Harmony Hotel for having us back!
Plus – Social Psychologists for Peace send an open letter to Vladimir Putin urging him to reverse course on the tragic invasion of Ukraine. Putin seems intent on toppling the Ukranian government but has he considered Sherif et al (1961), Tajfel (1977), Festinger (1954), and Brewer (1991)?
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