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Chapter 6 - The Moveable Object

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2021

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Summary

All Aboard

Allow us to begin with an extended quotation – a complete fragment from the notebooks of Franz Kafka:

I stand on the end platform of the tram and am completely unsure of my footing in this world, in this town, in my family. Not even casually could I indicate any claims that I might rightly advance in any direction. I have not even any defense to offer for standing on this platform, holding on to this strap, letting myself be carried along by this tram, nor for the people who give way to the tram or walk quietly along or stand gazing into shop windows. Nobody asks me to put up a defense, indeed, but that is irrelevant.

The tram approaches a stopping place and a girl takes up her position near the step, ready to alight. She is as distinct to me as if I had run my hands over her. She is dressed in black, the pleats of her skirt hang almost still, her blouse is tight and has a collar of white fine-meshed lace, her left hand is braced flat against the side of the tram, the umbrella in her right hand rests on the second top step. Her face is brown, her nose, slightly pinched at the sides, has a broad round tip. She has a lot of brown hair and stray little tendrils on the right temple. Her small ear is close-set, but since I am near her I can see the whole ridge of the whorl of her right ear and the shadow at the root of it.

At that point I ask myself: How is it that she is not amazed at herself, that she keeps her lips closed and makes no such remark?

Such are the thoughts of an early twentieth-century commuter. And yet, however atomized and existentially confused our allegorical author-narrator-protagonist may feel in this piece, he is not alone in finding the liminal space of public transport conducive to questions of collectivity, affect and “amazement.” Indeed, there is a proud history of thinkers and writers enjoying epiphanies – whether figured positively or negatively – while riding the train or the tram.

Type
Chapter
Information
Avoiding the Subject
Media, Culture and the Object
, pp. 109 - 128
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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