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Franz Kafka's Novella, The Metamorphosis Essay

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One of the saddest aspects of Franz Kafka's novella, The Metamorphosis, concerns the fact that young Gregor Samsa genuinely cares about this family, working hard to support them, even though they do little for themselves. On the surface, Kafka's 1916 novella, seems to be just a tale of Gregor morphing into a cockroach, but, a closer reading with Marx and Engels economic theories in mind, reveals an imposing metaphor that gives the improbable story a great deal of relevance to the structure of Marxist society. Samsa, the protagonist, signifies the proletariat, or the working class, and his unnamed manager represents the bourgeoisie. The conflict that arises between the two after Gregor's metamorphosis renders him unable to work …show more content…

“If I didn't hold back from my parents' sake, I would have quit long ago”(Kafka 4). It is only economic necessity that keeps him going to work everyday. Conflicts exists in Gregor's life between his human desire to work for his own direct benefit and the economic demands that alienate him from his labor by forcing him to work for someone else. The imagery of Gregor transforming into giant insect signifies his family's view of Gregor as a lowly, despicable thing. This has the effect of better helping the audience understand why the family treats Gregor so poorly. Gregor was merely a tool the family uses to survive. From the opening of The Metamorphosis, Gregor's character depicts him as somewhat pathetic. Gregor's enslavement by his family, portrays him, but as a family member, but as a source of income. The first to abandon Gregor was the manager, the bourgeoisie. According to Marx and Engels, the bourgeoisie has resolved personal worth into exchange value. Alone in his room, Gregor tries to rebuild the self-identity that he has lost by living entirely for others and ignoring his own needs. However, he can not escape what he sees as his family duty, and continues to act only to serve his family by doing his best not to inconvenience them. Gregor's metamorphosis from man to cockroach represents his “judgment on himself by his defeated

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