Gregor is also the protagonist in the story. “The Metamorphosis” is a depiction of Gregor’s life…
Though at first, Gregor’s parents are highly thankful to him for supporting them, but as soon as Gregor begins to transform and is no longer able to provide for his family and is completely isolated. Over the years of Gregor supporting the family, it was something the families can to expect of him rather than a sacrifice he was willing making for them. Very soon after Gregor has isolated himself, his father does not even really try to reach out to his son, seemingly because of his shame in Gregor for no longer supporting the family. At the end of Part II, Gregor has also reached the point of making sure to keep himself from his mother. By the end of this part of Metamorphosis, his family is slowly starting to reject him and his father already…
It is not surprising that the family in “Metamorphosis” experienced multiple metamorphosis, for example, the protagonist Gregor who is the son and the financial support of the family, transformed into an insect, then he accepts his metamorphosis, rather to change.However, metamorphosis reveals on overcome the difficulties by transformation rather than undergo with it. For instance, the parents decided to take jobs to overcome the problem of loss Gregor’s financial support, decided to start a better life without Gregor. And Gregor’s sister, Grete slowly diminished her pity toward her brother, started take the responsibility of an adult to support and take care the family. Ultimately, the family find out that they can depend on themselves.…
In part two of the Metamorphosis, Gregor is misunderstood with the situation of trying to keep the picture of the woman in his room. As he covers it, the mother arrives in his room and is terrified at what she sees. She faints from seeing Gregor on the wall, and his sister tells the father that he broke out, but the father misinterprets this and believes that Gregor has tried attacking his wife. Gregor is faced with still interpreting himself as a human, or as an insect. His sister seems to still perceive that Gregor still possesses some kind of humanity, but then slowly…
In the novel, Gregor’s father shows considerable hostility towards him. Kafka’s own father was domineering and severe and thoroughly disappointed by his son’s thoughtful temperament, feeble form, and literary interests. His youth was hard which may have contributed to his development of an existentialist point of view. Kafka portrays this less than loving parent Gregor’s father. When Gregor emerges from his bedroom and his father comes home from work Gregor notices how sharp he looks and speaks of his father’s sternness, “he knew full well, right from the first day of his new life, that his father thought it necessary to always be extremely strict with him. (Kafka 32) Gregor must come to acceptance of even this less than loving treatment from his father.…
Leaving behind his desires as a human being all he will think about was his father’s debt and how much he will have to work to help his family. Gregor had earned so much money that he was able to meet the whole family expenses. We can see evidence in the…
The family members who used to depend on Gregor to survive changed to the degree…
In the “Kafka’s fantasy of punishment”, Author Kaiser reveals and scrutinizes more insightfully the significant meaning of the metamorphosis of Gregor Samsa. In Kaiser’s point of view, Gregor’s transformation is a “self-punishment for his earlier competitive striving aimed against his father.” His unintentional emotions toward his father are beyond hatred, which is interpreted by Kaiser as an oedipal jealousy intended for the mother. However, that is not the manifest struggle between the son and father. It is Gregor’s bold ambition costs him to suffer. Before his catastrophic metamorphosis, the son takes up the position as head of the family as a result of business failure of his father. He begins to work assiduously to sustain the whole family;…
Before anyone can change, they certainly have to go through a metamorphosis. Here is where life takes another form. In novels there are always certain events that make the characters change. These changes can be for good or bad. In “The Metamorphosis”, by Franz Kafka the protagonist, Gregor Samsa suffers a significant change. This novella is about a young man who has taken care of his family during the last five years. His life was limited to work and care for his family. None of the members of his family were used to work. In this family had to happen something really bad, so they can notice that they have to do something for themselves. The nature of Gregor’s reality changes insignificantly in spite of his drastic physical changes. Gregor’s metamorphosis leads an important change in the members of his family. The metamorphosis of Gregor eases the sudden change of his family, showing that a disgrace is needed in order to force people or even family, out of the stagnation and put them into life.…
The tone of “Metamorphosis” is similar to the tone of “A Rose for Emily.”Gregor and Miss Emily are both isolated and alienated. The narrator says that Gregor has an “exhausting profession” as a traveling salesman. Gregor rides on a train all of the time for his work. He meets new people, but he has no affection for them. Gregor does not spend a lot of time with his family. The narrator is showing that Gregor is isolated and feels alienated from his family because he is working all the time to support his family. The narrator shows this by the other salesmen that Gregor sees at the “pension” having breakfast. Gregor states that he would “like to see what would happen if he were to try that out with his director sometime.” The narrator is implying that Gregor wants to be like the other salesman but he cannot because his boss would not allow it. Gregor always keeps his door locked whether he is traveling or at home. The narrator states, that Gregor uses “precaution” by “locking every door at night,” regardless if he is at “home or traveling.” The narrator says that Gregor’s father gave him a “truly liberating kick” back into his room and “Battered shut” the door with his cane. “Raindrops could be heard plunking against the tin window-ledges made Gregor quite melancholy.” The word “melancholy” denotes sadness or depression of sprits; gloom. Then when he wakes up as a cockroach, he is locked in his room. Gregor is isolated from his dad, mom, and sister Grete because they locked him in his bedroom at the end of the story.…
The breakdown of the father’s employment five years earlier actually created the family dynamic, for instance in the beginning of the story clarifies Gregor’s vital role in the family. Gregor acknowledges the amount he fears work and he defines why he abhors it to such an extent. Plus how he despises such a large number of assorted things about his enterprise and how he can never develop more abreast with anybody.…
Bobby Knight, a retired Indiana University basketball coach, once said, “People change over the years, and that changes situations for good and for bad.” Knights thoughts about people changing closely relates to the book Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka. In Metamorphosis, the main character, Gregor Samsa, turns into a bug. This transformation deeply affects his family members by solving some situations, but also creating new problems. Kafka’s change in characters reveals a larger theme of family roles.…
Gregor Samsa's sister, Grete, in The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka, seems to undergo a metamorphosis that is parallel to her brother's. As Gregor takes on the characteristics of an insect, Grete gains her independence and maturity.…
The early twentieth century represented a time of hardship and struggles throughout Europe. In 1915, at the onset of World War I, Austria-Hungary centered at the heart of this turmoil. This societal angst eventually translated into/became the individual alienation that lies at the center of Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis. The protagonist Gregor Samsa’s shocking change into a bug reflects this angst felt by Kafka and his own perception of the world – and his role in it. As a bug, he cannot provide for his family any longer, and therefore becomes excluded from familial affairs. The family adjusts to his plight by taking on extra jobs and admitting boarders into the home for extra financial support; all the while, Gregor becomes victimized by the coldness of his newfound world. In a period where everyday living presented a daily fight to survive, the family could not lament Gregor’s absence for too long before worrying about personal wellbeing. This coldness of that era is incorporated through Gregor’s dire situation and in turn, the family’s cold reaction indicates the “survival of the fittest” theme evident in families during that time. Kafka employs depressing language and style, a three-part structure to the novel, and an extended metaphor to shape the belief that in a world filled with conflict, regardless of family ties, only the fittest will endure.…
In the novel, The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, alienation and isolation are very prominent themes that flow through the pages. When Gregor undergoes his transformation into a grotesque insect, it creates this psychological and emotional rift between Gregor and his family.…