Gregor Samsa's Isolation in 'The Metamorphosis' by Franz Kafka

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Throughout Franz Kafka’s novel The Metamorphosis, Gregor Samsa suffers through constant isolation from his peers, family and most devastatingly, his dreams for his future. Being the dutiful son that Gregor was, he sacrifices his freedom in life to pay off his family 's debt and with that burden unfortunately becomes the financial head of household. This role as breadwinner results in Gregor’s isolation as he spends long hours working as a traveling salesman. Not only is he required to work constantly but the demands of his family weigh on his shoulders as well. They treat him almost inhumanly, even the critic Rolleston comments that “Gregor is exploited by his sister” and that further isolates him as they do not appeal to him emotionally. Even …show more content…

Unaffected by the change in his appearance he continued to think about work and his train without regard for his new found physical limitations.Even with the knowledge that he is now a vermin he felt the obligation of going to work for his family pulling him and “Gregor 's fate is certain but without hope” (Bloom). It is certain that Gregor has to get up and go to work and that even though he is physically incapable, he no longer has any hope that he will be excused from his duty to his family. Without the hope that he would receive help from his family because they were isolated both physically and mentally from Gregor, he began to accept and adapt. Both “Gregor himself and even the narrator accept” (Roeston) his new form to the point where “he tried to get out of bed with the lower part of his body, but this lower part… proved to difficult to budge:” (Kafka 7). The increasing difficulty with his movement did not faze Gregor nor did feel the need to call out for help from his family. He has no hope in his family’s ability to help him, he shoulders the entire weight of the family’s prosperity and now he is shouldering his own illness and transformation. Every time they address him that morning his replies consist of “Yes, yes, thanks, Mother, I’m just getting up”(Kafka 5), instead of communicating his weakness and failing. His transformation into a vermin and into the mindset of …show more content…

As his family increase their discontent with caring for him, he too increases his lack of self-care. At this point, Gregor was so isolated that “no one harassed him, he was left completely to his own” (Kafka 50). This complete and utter solitude results in Gregor fully developing his self-neglecting tendencies and “the word "empty" denotes the willed replacement of his being”(Roseton). Resigning to his fate, Gregor accepts death. He thinks “in his final consciousness that his death is a liberation” (Bloom), and that in essence is suicidal thinking. This suicidal thinking builds upon the topic of Gregor’s isolation leading to him developing depression. In his suicidal thinking and allowing himself to die, Gregor is harming himself by not fighting against the finality of his last

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