The Metamorphosis
By: Mike • Essay • 339 Words • December 5, 2009 • 1,293 Views
Essay title: The Metamorphosis
No matter how intensely or how closely a story is read and analyzed, there will always linger some minds that remain perplexed. Although never easy to delineate, fables such as The Metamorphosis, tell a morality story, one especially with animals as characters. The fable, The Metamorphosis, speaks of the tragic and absurd tale of a working-class man who is transformed into a bug and the overall isolation and rejection he receives from his family and the rest of humanity.
The supernatural elements in the story are obvious like they should be in a fable. Beginning from the very first few lines of the story, a bizarre and absurd mood is quickly set: “As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect.” This leaves the reader instantly puzzled, for it is not often that humans are turned into insects. And although as unrealistic as the story first seems to the reader, the realistic elements in this story include about everything else. The reaction to the metamorphosis by Gregor's family is probably the most realistic.
Whether Kafka meant for there to be a moral or not, there is remarkable