Abstract

Franz Kafka, intrigued by the possibility of representing movement in a still medium, made several drawings of galloping horses. This essay examines these drawings in the context of contemporaneous attempts to capture dynamic motion in visual media. Around 1900, artists and scientists experimented with various painting styles and photographic techniques to depict the movement of human and animal bodies in highbrow art, popular entertainment, and to advance the science of sport. Kafka’s short literary work “Wunsch, Indianer zu werden” represents a related attempt to depict the movement of a horse and rider. This essay draws a parallel between the destabilizing effects of Kafka’s visual and literary representations of a horse in motion, which reveal the productive tensions that arise from representing movement in each medium.

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