Saturday, July 20, 2019
Franz Kafkas The Metamorphosis :: Metamorphosis essays
The Metamorphosis        The Metamorphosis is the story of a commercial traveler, Gregor Samsa,    that one morning awoke turned into a gigantic insect. It is no dream    but, simply and plainly, a real metamorphosis with no rhetoric in    between. Facing this incredible fact, Kafka does not do any realistic    concessions and keeps the new condition of the character to the end.    That makes of The metamorphosis a hard work of fiction, in the way of    Odyssey (with which, besides, it is closely related) or in the way of    the Medieval fairy tales, specially those in which the wicked witch    turns The Prince Charming into a hideous animal.         >From the other side, the work, that belongs to a trilogy about marriage    in relation to the individual, the family and the so-ciety written by    Kafka, has a highly autobiographical contain. In The Judgment the    subject is the engagement assumed as a treason to the literary calling;    in The metamorphosis there is a view of marriage and family relations    from a masochistic and incestuous perspective; in The Trial, it is the    settlement of accounts, related with the incapacity of accomplishing the    acquired compro-mises, according to an unwritten law, he must pay. In    the three cases, the story ends with the protagonist's death.         The Metamorphosis is built on a fiction level with two faces, Crime and    Punishment by Dostoevsky and Venus in Furs by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch,    superposed in a way they get in contact with a real level with two faces    too, the family relations and his dreams of Felice. By the merging of    theses two levels, Kafka gets a fantastic reality which allows him to    express his deepest dreams and desires in relation with marriage and sex    in a poetic language that turns The Metamorphosis into a classic of    erotism, aspect not considered until now. (Such a pleiad, Kafka, Sacher-    Masoch and Dostoesky, met in The Metamorphosis turns into a height of    masochism this work).              PART ONE         The Metamorphosis has three parts: the first one describes both the    transformation of Gregory and his family's reaction to this respect; the    second part shows the new cotidianity of the fami-liar group whose    fragile estability crush with Gregory and sis-ter's bringing face to    face; and the last part, where we attend Gregory's frustrated attemp of    reconquering his sister, ends with his death.         The foreground onto which Kafka builds his work is Dostoevsky's novel.    This one brings to him a textual base that he lightly, mainly through    substitutions, varies for adapting it to the intentions of his own    story. For the first part of The Meta-morphosis, Kafka takes three    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.