RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Kafka and the Rabbis: Re-reading “The Judgment” in Light of Rabbinic Law JF Monatshefte FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 346 OP 358 DO 10.1353/mon.2012.0068 VO 104 IS 3 A1 Oliver Hiob YR 2012 UL http://mon.uwpress.org/content/104/3/346.abstract AB This article focuses on the judgment in Franz Kafka’s “The Judgment.” It reevaluates the father’s sentence, “I now condemn you to death by drowning!” from a religious-legal perspective. To approach Kafka’s text from this perspective challenges traditional interpretations of this narrative, which tend to not question the validity of the father’s judgment at all. By highlighting the various transgressions of halakhah, i.e. rabbinic law, by Georg as well as his father, this essay shows that it is in fact not Georg, but his father who is guilty and therefore needs to be punished. It shows how the father transgresses halakhah on several occasions and that his sentence over the son is illegitimate. Additionally, by pointing out the connection of Kafka’s narrative to rabbinic law, this essay highlights its midrashic, i.e. commentary character and relates it to the biblical story of Jacob and Esau in the Book of Genesis. (OH)