![]() It is easy to view Gregor as an autobiographical study of Kafka himself. The same arrangement of the vowel a prevails, and there is also another play on words: Rabe is German for raven, the Czech word for which is kavka the raven, by the way, was the business emblem of Kafka's father.) (In this connection, it is noteworthy that in "Wedding Preparations in the Country," an earlier use of the metamorphosis motif, the hero's name is Raban. More significantly yet, samsja means "being alone" in Czech. The arrangement of the vowels in Samsa is the same as in Kafka. Plays on words and obvious similarities of names point to the story's highly autobiographical character. The price his guilt exacts is that of agonizing loneliness. It is through all his failures to act, then, rather than from specific irresponsible actions he commits, that Gregor is guilty. He craves love and understanding, but his prolonged inactivity gradually leads him to feel ever more indifferent about everything. Gregor has also put off sending his sister to the conservatory, although he promised to do so. Though it would be unfair to blame him for procrastinating, for not getting out of bed on the first morning of his metamorphosis, we have every reason to assume that he has procrastinated long before this - especially in regard to a decision about his unbearable situation at work. For example, he uses his whole body to anxiously guard the magazine clipping of a lady in a fur cape this is a good illustration of his pitiful preoccupation with sex. ![]() In a sense, Gregor is the archetype of many of Kafka's male characters: he is a man reluctant to act, fearful of possible mishaps, rather prone to exaggerated contemplation, and given to juvenile, surrogate dealings with sex. Gregor is not an enchanted prince in a fairy tale, yearning for deliverance from his animal state instead, he is a rather average salesman who awakens and finds himself transformed into an insect. The selection of an ordinary individual as victim heightens the impact of the absurd. Thus the reader finds himself confronted with Gregor's horrible fate and is left in doubt about the source of Gregor's doom and the existence of enough personal guilt to warrant such a harsh verdict. This element of receding, an important theme in Kafka's works, intensifies the gap between the hero and the unknown source of his condemnation. More so than Georg, however, who comes to accept his judgment, out of proportion though it may be, Gregor is a puzzled victim brought before the Absolute - here in the form of the chief clerk - which forever recedes into the background. His situation of intensifying anxiety, already an unalterable fact at his awakening, corresponds to Georg's after his sentence. Also both men are guilty: like Georg in "The judgment," Gregor Samsa (note the similarity of first names) is guilty of having cut himself off from his true self - long before his actual metamorphosis - and, to the extent he has done so, he is excluded from his family. ![]() Kafka wrote "The Metamorphosis" at the end of 1912, soon after he finished "The judgment," and it is worth noting that the two stories have much in common: a businessman and bachelor like Georg Bendemann of "The judgment," Gregor Samsa is confronted with an absurd fate in the form of a "gigantic insect," while Georg is confronted by absurdity in the person of his father.
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