In the story, “Metamorphosis,” by Franz Kafka, the transformation of character Gregor from human to insect, may seem exaggerated and overblown, but it has a meaning. Author Kafka, does this to show how a slight change in appearance can affect the notion or way people look at you. Gregor as a person, compassionate and caring for his family, gets treated like scum once he has become a beetle. A slight change in Gregor's appearance changes the way he acts and is treated. Starting off, Gregor has a round shell, expressed, “His armor-hard back and saw ...just about to slide off completely, could hardly stay in place.” (Kafka, 137) Gregor also obtained a brown tinted body during his transformation. He was given many legs, yet he was still human sized. Gregor comes from an almost disabled family of four. He pays …show more content…
He is a very caring guy. He is compassionate and his personality is worth commemorating. Gregor is the type of person who puts others before himself, and as the story goes on, he secretly realizes that nobody has ever been that thankful for him, yet he still cares for his sister after she feeds and takes care of him. And when his sister helps him he really sees the trust. Gregor and his sister have always had a decent relationship and have been there for each other. Gregor and his mother seem to have a good relationship. In my opinion, Gregor's mother truly does feel bad for what happened because she does try and help her son out, she just can't stand to see him that way. Gregor and his father are not close. The father is fairly disabled and unable to do physical labor. He usually comes home to sit down and sleep. We can tell Gregor and his father dont have the best relationship because his father abuses him. He slams him into the door, “ Then his father gave him one liberating push from behind, and he scurried, bleeding severely, far into the interior if his room.” (Kafka, 151) Also, when Gregor's looks scare the mother, the father assumes that Gregor
First of all, Gregors family pays less attention and see him less in the novella. Once said in the book "For the first fourteen days, Gregors parents could not come in to see him" (29). This quote
With this in mind, Gregor, being an allegory for Kafka, portrays his feelings towards his family and his involvement with them. He portrays most of his feelings through his sister, and father, who are mainly static characters
Both of these instances show that Gregor’s father has completely given up on his son to the extent that he would seriously injure him just to get this ugly creature out of his sight. By Gregor’s father never trying to help him from the beginning it shows that he has completely given up on, and ultimately betrayed, him.
Despite this, as the story unfolds, Gregor's father becomes increasingly unsympathetic and hostile towards his son, contributing significantly to his eventual death. While other family members' actions also played a role, his father's
Gregor endures his personal hell for quite a surprisingly long time. His sister is one of the only people who still talks to Gregor, but eventually, she couldn’t take it any longer. “They were emptying his room out; taking away everything that was dear to him; they had already taken his fretsaw and other tools”(Kafka 28). As time goes on, Gregor feels like he is gradually being stripped of his humanity especially after his room was cleaned out by his family. Eventually, his sister deems Gregor as inhuman, saying that if the insect was still Gregor, he would have left by then. Gregor’s father and mother both seem to agree with Grete that Gregor must go; that
But, as time goes on his sister Grete, who had been the one to care for him the most, begins to lose faith in his humanness. She says to her parents, "You must just try to get rid of the idea that this is Gregor. The fact that we've believed it for so long is the root of all our trouble." This same idea is reiterated when Gregor finally dies and his mother says, "Well, now thanks be to God." His family was convinced after a short while that it wasn't even their own Gregor underneath that hard exoskeleton.
According to the author, Gregor has always been an introvert. He would lock the door of his room and stay there and he would not even make any connection to anyone in his family, but her sister, Grete. Before his transformation, he would lock his door for privacy (class notes). Gregor is a hard-working man and he has dedicated his life to his work even though he is unsatisfied with his job. He would often think about rebelling against his family, but he can’t quite grasp the idea of leaving them. His willingness of working tirelessly for the sake of his family proves that he loves them. It is proven that he is lacking human contact because he cuts out a picture of a model off a magazine and he hanged it on his wall (414). This means that he has no special someone to spend his life with
Thirdly, he suffers isolation from the physical world, which he is no longer able to participate in due to his presence and lack of mobility. Lastly, he suffers isolation from other people around him, especially his family. By the end even his sister, Grete, the most compassionate member of the family, explanations that they should stop thoughtful of the creature as the person they knew. She says that “the fact that we’ve believed it so long is the root of our trouble” (Kafka 48), which can be taken to mean that at some point Gregor stopped being a person not only because of his entrance but since of his non-conformist actions. The beating he receives from his father shows the extent of the cruelty he endures, though his father knows that “family duty compulsory the conquest of disgust and the use of endurance, nothing but patience” (Kafka 36). The tragedy is that this alienation ends up killing Gregor, who “dies not as a vermin, but as a human being thinking of his family”. The transformation is an indication of the breakdown of Gregor’s psyche and alienation within his self. The reader is not told how the transformation
Gregor allowed his family to harass, bully and degrade him, in the same manner that Kafka had allowed his family to do. The similarity of Kafka’s relationship with his father was also portrayed with Gregor and his relationship with his father. Kafka intended to reflect and highlight the decisions that were made by Gregor being influenced by his family, by making them important protagonists within the novel. Gregor expresses from the beginning of the novel how his father intended on raising him, “from the first day of his new life that his father considered only the strictest treatment called for in dealing with him”38, much like Kafka’s father had. Gregor’s father was rather tough on him and his duties, and would take no clear- minded steps into understanding what Gregor, as a bug, did or tried to communicate through the actions he took. As he jumped to conclusions the second he saw Gregor out of his room, and would beat him with a cane trying to pressure him back to staying in his room as if he wasn’t even his son, or throwing apples at him. This provokes Gregor, allowing him to think more rationally, becoming more introverted, yet inside he was suffering with such sadness and crying desperately for some kind of recognition, much like Kafka did.
In this story, I fell that the writer does an excellent job of connecting the reader with Gregor. Right of the bat, the author almost forces the reader to identify with Gregor by showing the unfortunate details of his life. Throughout the story, the reader can’t help but sympathize with Gregor and will find themselves rooting for him. I’ve also found it interesting that by how the author has described Gregor as such a caring and considerate person, that he almost seems cute as a bug, like a family pet, but a giant, monstrous insect. This adds to the reader pitting Gregor for the reader understands that his family have both sympathy and revulsion toward him. Of the people in his family, his sister and mother most definitely find the most sympathy
Although Gregor’s mother defends him throughout most of the story, she starts to have her doubts once she sees how difficult Gregor has made life for the rest of the family. Before his transformation into this vermin, Gregor and his mother have a stable relationship. But, after Gregor’s metamorphosis is complete it was not until after “two weeks…[that] his parents could not bring themselves to come into see him,” (Kafka 29). The strength of the mother’s unconditional love for Gregor has diminished over the process of his metamorphosis, so much so, that she is repulsed by Gregor’s presence and is afraid to even be in the same room as him. The mother further rejects the physical state of her son by “pointing to Gregor’s room,” (Kafka 40) and telling Grete to “close that door,” (Kafka 40), therefore leaving Gregor in isolated and in the dark. Gregor’s mother has now caught on to the idea of distancing herself from her deformed son by
He is not the sole provider therefore the family has no reason to really like him anymore. Gregor was turned to a bug that cannot communicate to humans and he could barely walk properly. He lacked the human characteristics that made him lovable. He was always not shown sympathy when it came to these human attributes. Grete, his sister was taking care of him, but did not treat him as her brother.
Gregor is not only isolated from his family but also neglected as well. First, As stated before Gregor was never really loved in his family his father was had a negative influence on him. “With a hostile expression his father clenched his fist, as if to drive Gregor back into his room” Mr. Samsa almost barely comes out a compassionate character here. His reaction to Gregor's condition is aggression, rather than patience or sympathy. Second, His father even attacks him multiple times. The second time he was attacked by his father it was a serious enough wound to be life threatening. Gregor is unable to prevent this injury and obtain any sort of remedy; the family doesn’t seem to care at all, and he is at their mercy. Next,
She’s also the only person who seems to truly care, as she takes care of gregor for the beginning of the middle part of the story. [P. 1122] I don’t feel this sympathy for Gregor, as over the course of the story he doesn’t change at all emotionally. He came out the same way he went in, and the change doesn’t leave an impact. It almost seems like that when he died, you were
During the time that Gregor was forced to live out the remainder of his existence in his now prison like room, many family matters occur. For one his younger sister whom he is used to taking care of now trades places with him as far as roles in responsibility go. She now after years of good loving and nurturing feels obligated to repay Gregor for all his years of dedication. Since Gregor in his current metamorphosed state cannot do his every day activities, she sees to it that he is feed and his room is kept clean though she personally finds it hard to look at him for undisclosed reasons. While she is doing this it is interesting to see how much utter disgust and loath his father looks at him with, and not for just physical reasons either. This after years of