Supposedly I read Kafka's classic in high school, but didn't remember much about it. I returned to it on the Classics app for iPhone and found a su... (show more)
Supposedly I read Kafka's classic in high school, but didn't remember much about it. I returned to it on the Classics app for iPhone and found a surprisingly moving novella.
This time through, The Metamorphosis seemed to me to be ultimately about the destructive power of bitterness and how self-righteousness can poison our internal selves and our external relationships. Gregor's external condition seems to mirror the internal issues of resentment and bitterness that work to alienate him from his family.
Though Gregor is the sole financial provider for his family, he hates his life and his job. His resentment for his family grows, while he simultaneously sets himself up on the moral (though self-righteous) high ground as the unappreciated hard working core of the family. One part of him hates the burden his family's financial dependency has put on him; another part of him thrives on it and builds a sick sense of identity from it. We find out in the end that the other family members are actually capable of work and seem to grow and thrive when given the opportunity to do so.
Conversely, the Samsa family initially resents the fact that Gregor can no longer provide the safe and comfortable life they've grown accustom to. Gregor becomes a creature that is no longer son and brother to them - only a nuisance, embarrassment and financial liability.
It's actually upon Gregor's death that the Samsa family discovers they have more strength than they once realized. We see an act of courage from Gregor's father when he had previously only played the ingratiating coward. When before they seemed to be bound to the role of victim, responding to the capricious desires of faceless bosses and bearded tenants, in the end the family discovers that they are not as financially shackled as they once thought and they actually do have a life outside of their constricting apartment.
Finally, its the depiction of the power of art and music in an otherwise monotonous, dreary, and utilitarian world that I found most memorable. I'll carry Gregor's reaction to his sister's violin with me for a time to come: "Was he an animal if music could captivate him so? It seemed to him that he was being shown the way to the unknown nourishment he had been yearning for." I'm grateful for Kafka and nourishment that is found in surprising places. (show less)

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