Saturday, July 20, 2019
Kafkas Metamorphosis Essay -- Metamorphosis essays
 Kafka's Metamorphosis                  "As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy  dreams he found himself            transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect"  (Kafka 1757).           This opening is famous not only for its  startling content but also for its            calm, matter-of-fact style which then sets the  tone for the rest of the            story. Along with Homer's Iliad and Odyssey  and Dante's Inferno, Franz            Kafka's "The Metamorphosis" has one of the  most-memorized and most            attention-catching opening lines.                 Gregor Samsa feels that he has been treated as  a lowly insect and comes to            feel that he is one; the story makes the leap  from "I feel like an insect"            to "I am an insect." Whatever the causes for  Gregor feeling this way,            these causes have led to his isolation and  alienation (the feeling of            being a stranger and an alien, even in those  places where one should feel            at home). Gregor has undergone an ultimate  alienation: he is alienated            from both his psychological and physical  self.                 Once Gregor's metamorphosis (change) has been  accomplished, the story            moves inevitably to his death. In many ways,  the protagonist (main            character) of "The Metamorphosis" and his  dilemmas are...              ..., his company). We feel a chill to see  the authoritarian control            over Gregor and how it works itself out in the  story. And those of us who            know the history of  Germany and  Czechoslovakia  are chilled to see how the            events of the story find a parallel in the  Nazi politics and the Holocaust            that came soon after Kafka's death.                       Work Cited                  Kafka, Franz.  "The Metamorphosis."  Norton Anthology of World            Masterpieces.  Ed. Maynard Mack et al. 2  vols. Exp. ed. New York: Norton,            1995.  Vol. 2. 1757-1791.                                   
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