The Importance Of Existentialism In The Metamorphosis

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When reading a story, we immediately start to identify the conscious and unconscious themes that the author is trying to portray. When we gather enough details about the story we are able to make assumptions as to what the story is about and how it was meant to be portrayed by the author. Identifying themes in a story can be just as important as knowing the characters or their setting because the themes can tell us what the meaning of the story actually is. Franz Kafka’s story The Metamorphosis has several different meanings relating to the overall hidden message within the story. The theme “work and identify” is very strong throughout the story by Kafka especially, as the reader, you start to learn more about the characters and their overall mission as the story progresses and eventually digresses at the end. We also are able to learn more about the author during this story and how he relates to the term existentialist with his writing. When reading the story The Metamorphosis the reader is able to identify how work and identify are themes while realizing what makes the author, Franz Kafka, an existentialist.
Existentialism emerged as a movement in twentieth century literature and philosophical works. It described the belief that took the human subject, not merely the thinking subject, but the acting, feeling, living human individual and his or her conditions of existence. According to Kafka’s personal beliefs on existentialism, people have both an individual side of themselves and a side with the responsibility of society. If a person chooses themselves before society, they wont have the support of their community. However, if an individual picks society before themselves, their individuality will be lost. At the beginning of ...

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...ncome as Gregor was their only worker. To keep paying the bills, this change forces the family to find their own work, which no one else had done in a long time. The father gets job as a bank teller, his mother decides to sow clothes as she is skilled at this and his sister, Grete, starts to even work in a store. But after not too long the novel takes a turn as it is mentioned that the family falls into the exact scenario that Gregor had found himself in not too long before. They are now overworked, tired, and finding it to be a difficult task to pay off their own debt and take the responsibility their son had to endure. They soon fall into the same robotic routine that Gregor had adopted. Gregor’s responsibility as the independent worker is now overshadowed as the rest of the family picks up that role as they become morphed by their own work, just like Gregor was.

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