The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka — book cover

Book details

The Metamorphosis

by Franz Kafka

1915 · Bantam Classics

About the book

Gregor Samsa, a traveling salesman and his family’s sole financial provider, wakes up one morning to find he has become a giant, literal insect. Confined to his bedroom, he struggles to navigate his new physical form while his parents and sister react with initial shock, then growing resentment. As Gregor becomes a domestic burden, the narrative tracks his physical deterioration and his family’s shift from pity to hostility. The story focuses on the logistics of his isolation, his loss of human speech, and the eventual rejection by those he worked to support.

Readers interested in the intersection of psychology and social duty read this book to analyze how identity is tied to economic utility. It appeals to those studying existentialism and the internal experience of isolation. A reader finishes the text with a grim perspective on how quickly familial bonds can dissolve when an individual stops being productive. It provides a stark look at the loss of human dignity and the way bodies are treated as commodities within a household structure.

Details

Published
1915
Publisher
Bantam Classics
ISBN
9780553213690
Language
EN