Category: Kafka

  • Thoughts and Feelings after Reading Franz Kafka’s ‘The Metamorphosis’

    ‘The Metamorphosis’ by Kafka it gives us a story about transformation, abandoned by parents, relationship with sister. Instead of receiving love Gregor is an outcast and trying to find his way to a human again. One would normally think of the home and family as a sanctuary; however the evidence is true for Gregor Samsa…

  • Alienation in the Metamorphosis

    Alienation is the state or experience of being isolated from a group or an activity to which one should belong or in which one should be involved. Alienation is a central theme that Franz Kafka discusses in his story ‘Metamorphosis’ from the beginning all the way to the end when the main character, Gregor, dies…

  • A Psychological Analysis And Process Of Alienation On Kafka’s Metamorphosis

    The story of The Metamorphosis is easily told. It is the story of a travelling salesman by the name Gregor Samsa who wakes up one morning transformed into a hideous and monstrous vermin; he of course retains the human faculties of thinking and feeling, he is held prisoner and hidden by his family in his…

  • Critical Essays Understanding Kafka’s Writing

    A major problem confronting readers of Kafka’s short stories is to find a way through the increasingly dense thicket of interpretations. Among the many approaches one encounters is that of the autobiographical approach. This interpretation claims that Kafka’s works are little more than reflections of his lifelong tension between bachelorhood and marriage or, on another…

  • The Issue of Bureaucracy in Franz Kafka’s “The Trial”

    Introduction to Bureaucracy in “The Trial” Written at the beginning of the 20th century “The Trial” depicts “the rise of bureaucracy, the power of law, and the atomization of the individual”, which are allegorically reflected in a story about Joseph K., a bank employee who is accused of unspecified crimes. This rather surreal and pessimistic…

  • Franz Kafka: Short Biography

    There is sadness that force you to sleep, sadness that force you to cry, but the deepest kind of sadness the one you can’t let go of that forces you to write. Writing sometimes is a silent scream to all the buried words and repressed feelings inside of us but it’s the strongest sensations that…

  • Crow as a Guidance in Kafka on The Shore by Haruki Murakami

    In the novel, Kafka on the Shore, by Haruki Murakami, the protagonist Kafka Tamura, a fifteen-year-old Japanese, runs away from home intending to escape his father’s curse, which is that he will sleep with his sister and mather, then kill his father. During the escape, Kafka ran into multiple chaotic situations, and he managed to…

  • A Biographical Analysis On Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis

    Writers often intertwine their personal life experiences and emotions into their texts because it is with what they are most friendly. A writer who connects to their narrative carries more meaning in their text and develops a connection with their audience. Franz Kafka’s 1915 novella, ‘The Metamorphosis’ tells the tale of Gregor Samsa, a traveling…

  • Lack Of Communication As The Root Of All Conflict In Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis

    “Adfbafiwf dijabi dribankamishnit nadroobi ald kizohatro” You would probably think the above-written quote is just a typo; Or maybe I’m not thinking right? Well, what if I told you this quote makes absolute sense to me? That I am assuming it makes absolute sense to you, too’? Because, to me, this is English – the…

  • Half-Hanged Mary and The Metamorphosis: Comparison Essay

    Franz Kafka is is largely known for his early 20th century works that have been coined for the literary term Kafkaesque, inspired by a nightmarishly bleak reality with disoriented and confused protagonists who must come to terms with existential questions. Kafka’s most well-known novel is The Metamorphosis, which deals with a narrator in Gregor Samsa…