With a great preface Somewhere behind Milan Kundera, a close friend of Czech philosopher Karel Kosik (1926-2003), whose collection of essays is in front of readers (in Ilić's selection and translation), Franz Kafka's book Century deals with philosophical and literary topics.
Kosik, who experienced both fascism and communism, played a significant role in the Prague Spring of 1968, then lost his professorship at Charles University and had to change professions, known to local readers for his books Dialectics of the Concrete and Dialectics of Crisis.
In this book, as editor Jelena Majstorov puts it, “Kosik considers and comments on Kafka's belief that the modern age is hostile to the tragic, in whose place it places the grotesque. The attitude that we live in the post-heroic era is elaborated on the examples of the works of two great writers, Franz Kafka and Jaroslav Hasek, and their heroes Joseph K. and Joseph Schweik.