Kafka's Metamorphosis
Kafka's The Metamorphosis is not only the story of the transformation of Gregor Samsa; it is the story of the transformation of an entire family. When Gregor suddenly becomes a "horrible vermin" overnight (I), the reader has no choice but to register the effects of that change on Gregor's immediate environment, his family apartment. Because Gregor will never leave that apartment, it is fair to ask how his transformation transforms the others around him. I will concentrate on the chief clerk from Gregor's office, as a representative of the outside world, and Gregor's father Mr. Samsa, as representative of patriarchal authority, and considered as the instrument of Gregor's destruction. I suggest that the transformation which occurs in these other characters is the chief means by which Kafka intends his readers to assess the meaning of Gregor's own metamorphosis.
Gregor's immediate response to his own transformation is to attempt, as best as he can in his new body, to follow his customary routine. As a result, his initial thoughts concentrate less on proprioception within his new insect form, and more on worrying about whether he will be late for work: once he discovers the time is already seven o'clock, his immediate panic is that "Before it strikes quarter past seven I'll definitely have to have got properly out of bed. And by then somebody will have come round from work to ask what's happened to me as well, as they open up at work before seven o'clock." (I). This prediction turns out to be absolutely correct, which implies of course that Gregor's ordinary behavior is so regular that his tardiness is sufficient to require inquiry from the office. But Kafka carefully allows the chief clerk to arrive and begin interacting with Gregor before seeing him -- Gregor is still trying to get himself out of bed, and has not unlocked the door. But by the time Gregor ultimately emerges, the chief clerk -- bizarrely -- has nothing to say:
But the chief clerk had turned away as soon as Gregor had started to speak, and, with protruding lips, only stared back at him over his trembling shoulders as he left. He did not keep...
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