Search for Identity in Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis

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It seems to be very rare to stumble upon a honest, crystal-clear self reflection and criticism, a true necroscopy of one’s self, because it is much easier to “beholdest [..] the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye” [Matthew 7:3]. Perhaps it is only through the eyes of a vermin that Franz Kafka was finally able to open up completely to his father but, most importantly, to himself, reaching a level of frankness that could not even be attained in “Letter to His Father”. In “The Metamorphosis”, the theme of humanness and identity is revealed through the eyes of Gregor Samsa, who, in his claustrophobic, anxiety-ridden state of being trapped in the body of a vermin, experiences having his whole conception of identity being changed while watching his life slip away in front of his eyes, as his family contributes to his final act of giving up.
Franz Kafka’s “The Metamorphosis” completely messes with any conceptions of humanness and identity a reader might hold, and perfectly captures the element of anxiety that emerges simultaneously with accepting that you do not know yourself at all. At first, the book seems like an abandonment of common sense, a completely absurd situation, nothing more than an “entomological fantasy”. When the main character, Gregor Samsa “woke from troubled dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a horrible vermin.” This statement appears to be absolutely nonsensical, since vermin are not typically regarded as having consciousness or the mental capacity required to assess situations. In “The Metamorphosis”, Franz Kafka proposes the idea that our memory is the leading factor in determining our identification. Simply put, since Gregor Samsa remembers h...

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... was, in my opinion, the leading factor towards Gregor difficulties with dealing with himself. The complete lack of help from his parents, and the mild disgust with which his sister took care of Gregor’s even the most basic needs might also point to emotional neglect, and could have been the main reason for his issues with identity in the first place.
In conclusion, because Gregor’s identity in his insect form was entirely based on his memory of having once been a human, and because of a lack of any physical proof of his past, he struggled with accepting his own humanness. During this stage of doubt and self-questioning, he went through a mental and physical metamorphosis, turning insane and drowning in depression and anxiety. However, the last straw for him was exactly his family’s refusal to accept him as a human, contributing to him finally breaking and giving up.

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