Kafka and the Art of the Advocate
Mock Grad Thesis: Titorelli and the Lawyer’s Art in Kafka’s “The Trial” Franz Kafka’s novel The Trial offers an insightful perspective for a thesis on the nature of institutional power: the legal system is not a mechanism for discovering truth, but a performative art form that constructs its own reality, indistinguishable from the fabrication of a painter working from hearsay. Through the character of Titorelli, a court painter, Kafka argues that the "art" of the lawyer and the "art" of the painter are mirror images of the same corrupt endeavor. Both professions in the novel are reduced to the production of illusions designed to sustain a system that operates on fiction rather than fact. 1. The Convergence of Roles: Painter as Lawyer, Lawyer as Painter The central conceit of the novel is the collapse of boundaries between the artist and the legal professional. Titorelli explicitly admits, "Have you noticed I sound almost like a lawyer? It's constantly inte...