Last Updated:2025/12/30
Sentence
The
corpus
of
Kafka's
writing,
they
argue,
is
‘a
rhizome,
a
burrow’
(K
7)—an
uncentered
and
meandering
growth
like
crab
grass,
a
complex,
aleatory
network
of
pathways
like
a
rabbit
warren.
A
rhizome,
as
Deleuze
and
Guattari
explain
in
Rhizome:
an
Introduction
(1976),
is
the
antithesis
of
a
root-tree
structure,
or
‘arborescence’,
the
structural
model
which
has
dominated
Western
thought
from
Porphyrian
trees,
to
Linnaean
taxonomies,
to
Chomskyan
sentence
diagrams.
Quizzes for review
The corpus of Kafka's writing, they argue, is ‘a rhizome, a burrow’ (K 7)—an uncentered and meandering growth like crab grass, a complex, aleatory network of pathways like a rabbit warren. A rhizome, as Deleuze and Guattari explain in Rhizome: an Introduction (1976), is the antithesis of a root-tree structure, or ‘arborescence’, the structural model which has dominated Western thought from Porphyrian trees, to Linnaean taxonomies, to Chomskyan sentence diagrams.
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