The Metamorphosis

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    children, and a typical life (“Franz Kafka”). He always felt like an outsider – “a German speaking Jew among Czech-speaking Christians (Puchner, 1202).” Most of his stories show his inner struggles, including his popular story The Metamorphosis. His story, The Metamorphosis, is a story about a man who turns into a cockroach. As elementary as a story with a plot like this sounds, the way that Kafka delivers the story, along with the themes, make the story a memorable literary work with a…

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    The Metamorphosis is much more than a dark, disturbing tale of a man who turns into a gigantic insect. It is a tale of a young man, the breadwinner of his family, who unexpectedly transfers from a human to an insect, the subsequent reactions of his family (repugnance…

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    The play “Equus” by Peter Shaffer and the short story “Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka both demonstrate alienation in the two main characters. Alan Strang in “Equus” becomes isolated from society and his family because of an extreme passion for horses, while Gregor Samsa in “Metamorphosis” is a character who has inherently isolated himself his whole life and he somehow becomes more isolated when he turns into a bug overnight. Both Alan and Gregor go through their estrangement in strikingly similar…

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    The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka and Bartleby the Scrivener by Herman Melville are two shorts stories that seem hard to compare and analyze together when read once. The plots seem to have no similarities. Although Kafka and Melville may have created two completely different stories, they have many similarities though different aspects. Similarities can be found between the main characters in the two stories, the narrative point of views, the theme, and symbols. The main character in The…

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    doing. They amount to a profound, and profoundly disturbing, vision of human life” (Dyson, 61). The Metamorphosis, for example, commences with an astronomically absurd situation: the protagonist finds he has transformed into a gigantic insect. “One morning, upon awakening from agitated dreams, Gregor Samsa found himself, in his bed, transformed into a monstrous vermin” (Kafka, ). When The Metamorphosis was written, Kafka was hard at work just like Gregor Samsa. He was suffering immensely, not…

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    Metamorphosis: a Metaphor for Complete Isolation and Transformation Taking place around the turn of the twentieth century, “One morning, as Gregor Samsa was waking from anxious dreams, he discovered in bed he had been changed into a monstrous verminous bug” (Kafka 1). Gregor Samsa is isolated from society before his transformation into a bug. He worked as a traveling salesman, a job he intensely loathes, which provides no satisfaction for human social needs and close relationships. With his…

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    different ways. For instance, the novella The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka, was rewritten into a graphic novel by Peter Kuper. Both the novella and the graphic novel have many similarities, including the theme of family duty. However, they differ in the way they convey this theme. The two different writing styles of the novella and the graphic novel impacts how the idea of family duty is expressed. To start off, the novella and the graphic novel of The Metamorphosis are compared in many ways.…

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    is hard to overcome being just a number. Within work and school, society teaches to follow the crowd and obey authority. Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis is a novella detailing a man’s absurd transformation from human to bug. Gregor Samsa goes from being mentally dehumanized in his working life to being physically and literally dehumanized. This metamorphosis affects not only Gregor, but his entire family. His family is burdened with the maintenance of a domesticated bug living amongst them but…

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    Kafka creates a tone of dread and despair in The Metamorphosis. Kafka establishes this tone in the first line of the novella as Gregor awakes from “unsettling dreams” to find himself “changed in his bed into a monstrous vermin” (3). The diction of “unsettling dreams” immediately produces an atmosphere of unease. The imagery of a “monstrous vermin” generates a sense of horror, and the reader understands that Kafka’s Gregor does not present a cheerful protagonist. Kafka describes Gregor’s…

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    boundary of genres was broken through by modernist writers. Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” and Franz Kafka’s “Metamorphosis” challenged the view of human reasoning for understanding the world with the use of modernism in literature. The texts by Woolf and Kafka are examples of the information about modernism by Fernald and Bru. Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” and Kafka’s “The Metamorphosis” held the characteristics of modernism by manipulating the past for a belief, challenged conventions…

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