What Creation Does to the Past

If I am not mistaken, the heterogeneous pieces I have enumerated resemble Kafka; if I am not mistaken, not all of them resemble each other. This second fact is the more significant. In each of these texts we find Kafka's idiosyncrasy to a greater or lesser degree, but if Kafka had never written a line, we would not perceive this quality; in other words, it would not exist. The poem "Fears and Scruples" by Browning foretells Kafka's work, but our reading of Kafka perceptibly sharpens and deflects our reading of the poem. Browning did not read it as we do now. In the vocabulary of criticism, the word "precursor" is indispensable, but it should be cleansed of all connotation of polemics or rivalry. The fact is that every writer creates his own precursors. His work modifies our conception of the past, as it will modify the future.

Jorge Luis Borges, Kafka and His Precursors (Other Inquisitions, trans. James E. Irby) (1951) · Excerpt

Borges arrives at this conclusion near the close of a brief, playful essay in which he catalogs a handful of writers whose work seems to anticipate Kafka: Zeno’s paradox, a parable by Kierkegaard, a poem by Browning, stories by Léon Bloy and Lord Dunsany. These precursors share almost nothing with one another. They become a constellation only when viewed from the vantage point Kafka’s writing provides. The predecessors did not create Kafka. Kafka created them, retroactively, by producing the work that made their family resemblance visible.

This reversal quietly dismantles the way we usually talk about originality. We tend to imagine influence flowing in one direction, from past to present, like water running downhill. The unease many feel around generative technologies often takes the same shape: if a system has absorbed everything that came before and can recombine it fluently, what is left for the human maker to contribute? Borges suggests the question moves in the wrong direction. The origin of materials recedes next to a larger concern: does the finished work reorganize the landscape it emerged from? A genuine creation doesn’t just arrive at the end of a tradition. It reaches back and alters the tradition itself.

There is something both heartening and demanding here. Originality was never about producing something from nothing; every maker works within and through what has already been made. But what Borges describes is not simply recombination. It is a kind of seeing so particular that, once it exists, the past looks different. Whether that quality of vision can belong to anything other than a living, historically particular mind is a question worth sitting with for a long time.

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