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Analysis Of 'The Hunger Artist, A Kafkaesque Moment'

Decent Essays

For decades, the hunger for acceptance has been continuously growing. However, there are obstacles in the way creating barriers between individuals. These barriers occur in day-to-day activities and interactions, affecting individuals, and creating negativity. Sebastian Junger once said, “Human beings need three basic things in order to be content: they need to feel competent at what they do; they need to feel authentic in their lives; and they need to feel connected to others” (Junger). Everyone wants to feel as if they are apart of something bigger where they can be united, accepted, and loved. Within each of Franz Kafka's short stories, “The Hunger Artist,” “The Metamorphosis,” and “Jackals and Arabs,” and Earl schumakers poem "Hunger Artist - A Kafkaesque Moment" the characters portray the process and struggles of todays human condition, for the need to obtain acceptance by others, through the connections of relationships, conflicts, and symbolism.
In the three stories, “The Hunger Artist,” “The Metamorphosis,” and “Jackals and Arabs,” the author creates a sense of struggle through relationships. Kafka’s characters are usually agitated, being faced with a situation that forces them to struggle in order to break free. In “The Hunger Artist” the main character is struggling to find himself and what he enjoys. In the Washington Post, author, Michael Dirda explains that Kafka once wrote, "In the struggle between yourself and the world, back the world" (Dirda). Many times individuals will take side with others around them even if they do not believe or understand the views. No one wants to feel different from others and be the outcast. In the poem "Hunger Artist - A Kafkaesque Moment" Schumaker writes "We seem to be the same thing/ Starving came instinctively/ As last hunger artist I can’t resign/ I have to see enlightenment one time" (20-23). As the hunger artist talks to a few townsman he says, "I always wanted you to admire my fasting, […] but you shouldn't admire it, […] because I have to fast, I cant help it, […] because I couldn't find the food I like (275). The hunger artist sits himself in front of a crowd of people to watch him as he fasts so that for a few minutes he can feel some kind of

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